You did. You said ‘not “fermented”, but “would ferment”.’
Those were the terns a Jesuit priest told me directly. And, frankly, the statement of a random jesuit in a personal conversation carries
far more weight than a random guy on the internet (you).
That means it may not have fermented by the time it is consume
No, it doesn’t, which
is my point. It is statistically certain that there is alcohol from fermentation in just pressed grapes. Whether or not you have the instruments to measure the amount is another question.
If there is oxygen available, yeast will
prefer the aerobic process, but this will not be 100%. This is the reason for splashing must or wort into the fermenter.
Of course, what churches, etc. purchase for use are bottles of wine which do contain fermented grape juice, i.e. alcohol.
“non-alcoholic” on a lab
emphasized textel tends to mean less than something like .5%, not that it isn’t present. In beer or commercial non-alcoholic wine, that is because the amount that can economically be removed has been.
That being the case, I do not understand why you made the claim that it must be something that would ferment rather than has fermented.
Again, not any assertion, but a Jesuit’s, and I’ll take such statements from any Jesuit (or any other priest) I’ve personally met over any non-clergy here, barring some kind of authentication.
That said, I repeat, there is no such thing as juice of crushed grapes that hasn’t fermented to
some degree,