The Wine Making
                Genius 
                by Jan F.
                Drewniak and Don Drewniak 
                This
                is the fifth excerpt from The
                Junk Picker (published in
                2012). 
                Setting:
                The Berkshires in Massachusetts during
                the Great Depression. 
                The
                characters in this episode: 
                Pinball (Pinball
                Johnny)  My father, Jan F. Drewniak, who
                was nineteen-years old and was in the process of
                rebuilding a large house and making a near one-mile
                lane passable from the nearest road. The house
                and a large barn were owned by the man for whom
                he had worked in a machine shop in Brooklyn for
                the two previous years. 
                Sparks 
                The nearest neighbor who was a friendly rival and
                sometimes foil. 
                Jack 
                Pinballs boss. 
                Tony  A
                frequent guest. 
                * * * * * 
                By late summer,
                the smell of chokeberries, or seed cherries as
                the locals called them, was strong everywhere
                around the property. Late one Saturday afternoon,
                Tony came over and sat down on the steps leading
                to my rooms.  
                You
                smell that, Pinball?  
                Sure do,
                after awhile it gets sickening. Same thing last
                year.  
                Maybe
                you can make some wine out of them.  
                Heck,
                the seeds are too big.  
                No
                different than grapes.  
                Why tell
                me about it? If you like wine that much, then you
                pick them instead of sitting here on that
                backside of yours.  
                You
                kidding? It would be a bit too much for an old
                tub of lard like me.  
                How do
                you make it?  
                Easy as
                pie. You get a barrel, a cider barrel is good,
                and you pour the berries in until its three-quarters
                full. Then you add a couple of gallons of water,
                about five pounds of sugar and toss in some yeast.
                Thats all, then you let it ferment.  
                It
                sounds easy.  
                Sure is.
                 
                The next
                morning before Sparks and his family went off to
                church, I went to see him. Sparks, do you
                have any cider barrels?  
                Back of
                the barn. Why?  
                I want
                to buy one.  
                Take
                them all and leave me the keys to your car.
                 
                I could only
                laugh.  
                Hell,
                he continued, you got just about everything
                else around here. One more wont hurt. Help
                yourself.  
                I havent
                started on your junk pile yet.  
                And youd
                damn better not. Why do you want the barrel?
                 
                Dont
                you smell anything?  
                Not them
                seed cherries? You might as well use my silo,
                fill it up and maybe you get a gallon.  
                What do
                you know about making wine?  
                Look,
                genius, we tried it one year. Never again. Its
                a lot of work and any wine you get is bitter as
                hell.  
                First
                off, Im not going to drink any of it, just
                want to see if I can make it. Also, Tony is
                Italian and should know more than you do. He says
                you can make enough from one barrel and thats
                good enough for me.  
                Then
                take the barrel and dont come later and cry
                on my shoulder.  
                 
                 
                I waited until the gang left and then I gathered
                up some baskets. Backing up the truck to a clump
                of shrubs, I began to pluck the berries like
                grapes. It didnt take long for the smell to
                get the best of me, so I began taking frequent
                breaks. If I couldnt reach the higher
                sitting berries, I left them alone and moved to
                the next bush.  
                Once the
                picking was done, I set the barrel on its side in
                back of the barn. I made a funnel out of
                cardboard, took out the stopper from the side and
                little by little I pressed berries into the
                barrel. Quite a few of them were lost in the
                process.  
                It turned out
                that I was well short of the berries needed and,
                as a result, I ended up making an additional trip
                to get more. Getting the chokeberry stains off my
                hands proved to be almost impossible. I
                remembered having read somewhere that rubbing raw
                potatoes on stained hands worked, so I gave it a
                try. It didnt take off all the staining,
                but it seemed to work better than anything else I
                tried.  
                The other
                ingredients added, I plugged up the barrel. That
                was it. When I checked it the next day, I found
                that the stopper was off and there were a lot of
                small flies around, so back on went the stopper.
                The stopper was off again the following day and
                there were fruit flies by the hundreds. I found a
                piece of tin in the barn, put the stopper back on,
                banged it in good and then tacked the tin over
                the stopper. Finally, I covered it with canvas.  
                Lets
                see that damn stopper pop out again, I said,
                satisfied that the problem had been solved.  
                 
                 
                Tony paid me his customary Saturday afternoon
                visit. We sat down and began to talk. Well,
                Tony, you talked me into making the wine. I
                filled a barrel during the week. How long do you
                wait?  
                About a
                week and a half. Did you follow instructions?
                 
                Sure did,
                but the damn thing drew flies by the hundreds.
                Twice I put the stopper back on and twice it came
                off for some reason, so I rammed the plug in and
                tacked tin over it.  
                Oh, hell!
                Where is it?  
                In back
                of the barn with a canvas over it. Why?  
                All the blood
                seemed to drain out of his face.  
                Were
                in trouble, he said.  
                What do
                you mean, trouble?  
                Just
                what I said. Youve got a bomb over there.
                Those gases are building up. That stopper should
                have been left out.  
                Well, I
                better go and take it out.  
                You cant.
                The thing might kill you.  
                I sat there
                trying to think up a solution. The thought of
                trying to find Smokey and asking him to shoot it
                from a distance using a rifle briefly crossing my
                mind, but that was a clear indication that I was
                not even close to coming up with a plan. A few
                minutes into the thinking process, the barrel let
                go. Had I not known what the cause of the
                explosion was, I would have sworn it was that of
                a cannon shot. Both Tony and I dropped to the
                ground and instinctively covered our heads with
                our hands.  
                Seconds later,
                Jack came running out of the house followed by
                most of the others. What the hell was that?
                he screamed as he followed Tony and me toward the
                back of the barn. Neither one of us gave him an
                answer.  
                What a mess!
                It was a good thing that the barrel was on its
                side with the top facing away from the barn as it
                was the top that let go. Everything going out to
                twenty feet was covered with a purple muck.  
                What the
                hell happened here? yelled Jack.  
                Tony laughed
                and told Jack what I had done.  
                Its
                my fault, Jack, I should have known better. I
                never made wine before, I said sheepishly.  
                And I
                hope never again, Pinball. 
                With that, he
                began to laugh as did the rest of his crew. All
                the while I felt as if I had Idiot
                printed across my forehead.  
                Sparks was
                there in less than five minutes. The explosion
                was too powerful for him not to have heard it.
                When Tony told him what happened, he all but fell
                down laughing and all the while slapping his hat
                against his right leg.  
                Told you
                and told you, Pinball, not to do it, but no, youre
                the wine making genius.  
                For once, I
                had no comeback and could do nothing but let
                Sparks enjoy the moment.  
                It wasnt
                long before the whole town knew what happened. By
                the time it reached the last person, the story
                was that the barn had been half blown away.  
                
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