Swamp, winemaking is not a difficult project, the key being clean equipment. There are a number of online sources for equipment, yeast, and even the necessary syrups for different types of wine. You can, of course, press your own juice, but it requires a press, which you can either build yourself or buy. I have made wine in a glass five gallon carboy, the type of glass bottle that bottled water comes in. Then you need a rubber stopper and an air lock, which you can rig up with some tubing and water, or buy, as it doesn't not cost much. In the local winery, we use lots of metabisulfate to sterilize the equipment, and it is not very expensive, either. After the fermentation is complete, it is time to bottle it. Since you won't be selling it, reusing wine bottles works just fine, and so too with either plastic corks or screw tops. Forget real cork, you will lose about one bottle in seven using it. Also, if you don't have any empty wine bottles laying around, it is really easy and fun to take full ones and make empties out of them.
As for bread, you can also use a recipe like the one you posted, and cook it on the stovetop with a dry cast iron pan. I just had some of the young kids do that. It makes an Indian bread called roti. It takes just a couple of minutes to make one round. This is the type of bread that Jesus multiplied in the two miracles. What really amazes me is that done right, it will puff up and make a pocket. Here is the url for a really nice Indian woman fixing rotis. It is fun just to watch how she does it:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jD4o_Lmy6bU&feature=related