Best Fruit Wine Production Equipment for Small Wineries
Small wineries have an enormous advantage in fruit wine: agility. You can work with short harvest windows, source specialty fruit, and run limited-edition batches that bigger players can’t touch. The right equipment is what turns that agility into consistent quality and repeatable profit. This guide breaks down the core fruit-wine equipment stack for small wineries—what each item does, what specs to look for at small-scale volumes, how to size and budget, and how to plan a phased build-out. At the end, you’ll find product recommendations to help you move from planning to production.VIST:Micet Craft Brewing Equipment Turnkey Solutions – Micet Group
What Makes Fruit Wine Equipment Different?
Fruit wine isn’t grape wine and it’s not beer—it sits in a niche that borrows from both worlds. Three realities shape your equipment choices:
- Pectin & Pulp Load: Apples, berries, stone fruit, tropicals—most carry heavy pectin and pulp that plug filters, stick to tank walls, and trap aroma. You’ll prioritize gentle crushing/pressing, enzymatic and mechanical clarification, and CIP-friendly surface finishes.
- Acid & Sugar Balance: Fruit musts can start with lower pH (higher acidity) and wildly variable Brix. You’ll lean on temperature control, pH/TA/SO₂ management, and dosing precision to keep fermentation clean and aromatic.
- Aromatics Are Everything: Oxygen exposure can flatten fruit character fast. Look for closed transfers, inert gas capability, low-O₂ pumps, and tight seals from day one.
Core Equipment Categories (and What to Look For)
1) Receiving, Sorting, Crushing & Destemming
- Fruit bins & lugs: Food-grade, stackable, smooth interiors for easy washdown.
- Sorting table: Optional but invaluable for cherries, berries, and soft fruit; vibration tables speed up removal of leaves/stems.
- Crusher/destemmer or fruit mill: Match the tool to the fruit:
- Pome fruit (apples/pears): Hammer mill or toothed roller mill to ~3–8 mm mash.
- Berries/stone fruit: Adjustable roller crusher; rubber rollers are gentler.
- Spec tips: Variable speed, stainless housings, tool-less disassembly, and >1.5 t/h throughput for typical small-winery harvest days.
- Why it matters: Gentle breakage maximizes juice yield and preserves aroma compounds you’ll spend the rest of the process trying not to lose.
2) Pressing: Basket, Bladder, or Pneumatic
- Manual basket presses work for ultra-boutique batches (<200 L), but labor is the bottleneck.
- Bladder presses (pneumatic) are the small-winery sweet spot: even pressure, high juice yield, and gentle on skins.
- Key specs: 100–1,500 L drum capacities; programmable press cycles; slotted vs. perforated draining surfaces; press bag options for pectin-heavy fruit.
- Sizing rule-of-thumb: Press capacity ~50–70% of your average daily harvested mash volume to cycle 2–3 loads per day.
3) Enzymes, Maceration & Clarification Aids
- Heated maceration tanks (optional) help pectin breakdown; otherwise dose pectinolytic enzymes per supplier instructions.
- Static settling tanks with cone bottoms let you rack clean juice off pulp the next day.
- Design features: Large racking arm, bottom drain, and sight glasses to see the settling interface.
4) Fermentation Tanks (Your Most Important Purchase)
- Material: 304/316 stainless steel with sanitary TIG welds and 2B or #4 finish for cleanability. 316 is preferred for highly acidic fruit musts.
- Geometry: Cylindroconical tanks (60–70° cone) with rotating racking arm, sample valve, PRV, CIP spray ball.
- Temperature control: Dimple jackets (or glycol cooling plates) are non-negotiable for fruit wine to preserve aromatics.
- Floating-lid tanks: Great for micro-lots; reduce headspace oxygen when the tank isn’t full.
- Sizing: Total fermentation capacity ≈ 1.5–2.0× your single-batch size to allow staggered fermentations and headspace. For a 1,000 L batch, two 1,000–1,500 L tanks beat one 2,000 L tank for flexibility.
5) Glycol Chiller & Temperature Automation
- Load calculation (quick estimate): For fruit wine at 12–16 °C, plan 0.75–1.25 refrigeration tons per actively fermenting 1,000 L when pitching warm fruit must; lower if pre-chilled.
- Features: Scroll compressor, glycol reservoir, inline strainer, low-temp protection, and multi-circuit outputs for independent tank control.
- Controls: Solenoid-valve loops per tank and a programmable thermostat (or centralized PLC) to manage setpoints and ramps.
6) Heat Exchange
- Plate heat exchangers let you pre-chill must from press to tank or crash-cool finished wine for cold-stabilization.
- Spec: 316 plates, EPDM gaskets, easy teardown, tri-clamp connections.
7) Pumps, Hoses & Fittings
- Pumps: Flexible impeller or low-shear centrifugal for transfers; positive displacement for viscous musts and dosing.
- Specs that save wine: VFD speed control, self-priming, stainless heads, and the ability to push CO₂ or N₂ for inert transfers.
- Hoses: Smooth-bore wine-rated hoses with tri-clamps. Standardize 1.5″ tri-clamp across the winery to reduce adapter chaos.
8) Clarification & Filtration
- Options by stage:
- Plate & frame (pad) filters: Affordable and flexible for small lots.
- Lenticular modules: Enclosed, cleaner changeovers, good for aromatic protection.
- Crossflow filtration: Capital-heavy but labor-light and gentle—ideal as you scale.
- Strategy: Use enzymes + cold settling to reduce load before filters. Keep spare pad grades on hand (gross, fine, sterile).
9) Stabilization: Cold, Heat & Chemical
- Cold stabilization: Jacketed bright/conditioning tanks; plan to hold wine at –2 to 0 °C for 1–2 weeks depending on fruit and TA.
- Heat/pasteurization: Not always required; consider tunnel pasteurizers for sweet fruit wines or RTD spritzers.
- Additions: SO₂ management, sorbate (for sweet wines), and fining agents—dose with graduated cylinders or a peristaltic dosing pump for precision.
10) Storage, Maturation & Oxygen Control
- Brite/conditioning tanks with jackets and floating lids are perfect for polishing and blending.
- Oak integration: Staves or chips in stainless (bagged for removal) give controlled extraction without the overhead of barrels.
- Inert gas kits: CO₂/N₂ regulators, quick-connects, and a sparging stone for tank purges and low-O₂ bottling.
11) Packaging Lines for Small Wineries
- Rinser–Filler–Capper/Corker monoblocks: Look for 2–6 head fillers with change parts for 187 mL–750 mL formats.
- Counter-pressure filling for petillant/frizzante fruit wines; gravity/vacuum for still wines.
- Closures: Natural/synthetic cork, crown caps for carbonated fruit wines, or ROPP screwcaps.
- QA: Inline fill-height sensor, outflow totalizer, and a small labeler (wrap-around or front/back).
- Output: 300–1,200 bph is typical for small wineries; design for a single-shift bottling day.
12) Sanitation & CIP (Clean-in-Place)
- CIP cart: Hot water loop, chemical dosing (caustic or peracetic), and return pump with a 3A-rated spray ball for tanks.
- Valve clusters: Butterfly valves with position indicators; minimize dead legs.
- SOPs: Rinse → Caustic → Rinse → Acid (as needed) → Rinse → Sanitize; verify with ATP swabs or micro testing.
13) Lab & QA Essentials
- Baseline kit: Hydrometer or densitometer, refractometer, pH meter (0.01 resolution), TA titration set, SO₂ (aeration-oxidation or vinmetrica), DO meter if budget allows.
- Tracking: Batch sheets for fruit origin, Brix, nutrients, yeast, temps, and SO₂—tie back to tank ID and lot codes.
Sizing Your System (Quick Planning Math)
- Annual Volume → Tankage:
Desired annual packaged volume ÷ 0.85 (losses) ÷ your number of turns per tank = required tank capacity.
Example: 24,000 L/year, 15% process loss, 6 turns per tank → 24,000/0.85/6 ≈ 4,700 L of total fermentation capacity. Two 2,500 L jacketed conicals would do it with headspace. - Chiller Tonnage:
Actively fermenting liters × 0.0009 to 0.0013 = refrigeration tons (quick check).
Example: 3,000 L active → ~2.7–3.9 tons; choose a 4–5-ton unit for margin and cold-stabilization loads. - Press Size:
Daily mash (L) ÷ 2 = minimum press drum (L), assuming two press cycles/day. More cycles = smaller press, more labor. - Pump Flow:
Target transfers in 20–40 minutes. For 1,500 L tanks, a 40–60 L/min pump with VFD provides control and speed.
Floor Plan & Utilities (Small-Winery Priorities)
- Flow: Receiving → Crush/Mill → Press → HX (optional) → Ferment → Clarify → Stabilize → Package. Keep hose runs short and keep dirty/wet operations away from packaging.
- Utilities: 208–230 V or 380–480 V for chillers; 30–60 A service for small setups; compressed air for valves; CO₂/N₂ bottles near purge points.
- Drainage: Sloped, trench drains; FRP or epoxy floors for acid resistance.
- Ergonomics: Tank manways at reachable heights, mezzanines or platforms for top access, pallet-jack clearances.
Phased Equipment Package (Starter → Growth → Pro)
Phase 1: Starter (Micro-Winery / Pilot)
- Small sorting table, compact crusher/mill
- 300–800 L bladder press
- Two or three 500–1,000 L jacketed conical fermenters
- 1–2 ton glycol chiller + plate HX
- Low-shear pump, hoses, tri-clamps
- Plate & frame filter, enzyme kit
- One jacketed brite tank with floating lid
- Hand corker/capper + benchtop labeler
What you can do: 6–12 kL/year, multiple SKUs, consistent temp control, clean filtration, and pro-looking packaging.
Phase 2: Growth (Small Commercial Winery)
- Add 1,000–2,000 L fermenters (total 4–6 tanks)
- 1,500 L bladder press
- 4–6 ton chiller, automated tank solenoids
- Lenticular filter housing; peristaltic dosing pump
- Semi-auto rinser/filler/capper monoblock (600–900 bph)
- Dedicated CIP cart
- DO meter and inline thermowells
What you can do: 15–40 kL/year, better yields, faster turns, tighter oxygen control.
Phase 3: Pro (High-Mix, High-Efficiency)
- Crossflow filtration system
- 8–10 ton chiller + cold-stab capacity
- Inline carbonation option for spritzers/seltzers
- Tunnel pasteurizer for sweet SKUs
- Counter-pressure filler upgrade, inline QA sensors
- Centralized PLC/HMI for temperature automation
What you can do: 40–100 kL/year with labor-efficient, repeatable quality and broadened product portfolio.
Budget Pointers (Where to Spend First)
- Temperature control beats almost everything else in protecting fruit aroma and controlling fermentation. Don’t under-spec the chiller or skip jackets.
- Press quality materially affects yield and turbidity—buy once, cry once.
- Hygiene & CIP save time every week and prevent off-flavors you can’t filter out later.
- Pumps & fittings you touch daily—VFD + standardized tri-clamps = fewer headaches.
Operating Tips for Cleaner, Brighter Fruit Wine
- Enzyme early: Dose pectinase at crush; it halves downstream pain.
- Rack warm, then chill: Settle 12–24 h, rack off gross lees, then bring to ferment temp.
- Nutrient strategy: Fruit musts often need YAN supplementation—use staggered nutrient additions to prevent stuck ferments.
- Protect aromatics: Inert gas purge tanks and lines; keep headspace to a minimum, especially during maturation.
- Filter smart: Don’t jump straight to sterile; step from coarse → polish → sterile to avoid blinding.
- Stabilize based on style: Dry fruit wines might only need cold + SO₂; sweet or spritzy SKUs may require sorbate and/or pasteurization.Taba Squishy
Three Example Equipment Lists (Real-World Scenarios)
- A) Berry-Focused Winery (~12,000 L/year):
- 800 L bladder press; berry-friendly crusher with soft rollers
- Three 1,000 L jacketed conicals + one 1,500 L brite
- 3-ton chiller; 20-plate HX
- VFD flexible-impeller pump; plate & frame filter (40×40 pads)
- Benchtop gravity filler + hand corker/crown capper
- B) Apple/Pear Winery (~25,000 L/year):
- Hammer mill; 1,500 L bladder press
- Four 1,500 L jacketed conicals + two 2,000 L brite tanks
- 5-ton chiller; lenticular filter housing
- Semi-auto 4-head filler/capper; wrap labeler
- CIP cart; peristaltic dosing pump
- C) Mixed Fruit + Spritzers (~40,000 L/year):
- Variable-speed crusher + 1,500 L press
- Six 2,000 L jacketed conicals; carbonation-rated brite tank
- 8-ton chiller; counter-pressure 6-head filler
- Crossflow filtration; tunnel pasteurizer
FAQs
Q1: What size fermentation tanks should a small fruit winery start with?
Most small wineries thrive with 1,000–1,500 L jacketed conicals. This size offers enough mass for stable ferments, lets you run multiple SKUs, and keeps oxygen control manageable. If you frequently run micro-lots or top up partial harvests, add one floating-lid tank (1,000–2,000 L) to eliminate headspace oxygen.
Q2: Do I really need a glycol chiller for fruit wine?
Yes. Fruit wine’s signature aromas depend on cool, controlled ferments (typically 12–18 °C). Ambient-only fermentation risks volatile acid, solventy esters, and lost aroma. A right-sized 2–5-ton chiller for starter setups with solenoid-controlled tank jackets pays for itself in yield and quality.
Q3: What filtration method is best for small wineries?
Start with plate & frame (pads) for cost and flexibility. As volumes and SKUs grow, add lenticular modules to reduce oxygen pickup during polishing. When you’re consistently filtering >10–15 kL/month or want night-shift efficiency, crossflow delivers clarity with minimal labor and low product loss.
vist:https://www.micetcraft.com/

