Good day all,
Today I'm attempting my first sugar wine doing it deliberately as simplistically as I can. I've been reading and watching videos for a long time as I've been worried about things such as hygiene, exploding containers, poisoning, yeasts not working, using wrong yeasts, wrong sugars, not enough of either, too much of either, whether airlocks are truly necessary, how long should the process take etc. So today I've done 2 experiments:-
Experiment 1:
1L cleaned bottle full to the shoulder with cooled boiled water.
Added 500g of granulated sugar and a couple of grams of dried active yeast.
Experiment 2:
1L cleaned bottle full to the shoulder with cooled boiled water.
Added 500g of granulated sugar and a couple of grams of dried active yeast.
Some squeezed satsuma juice (4 satsumas, ensured no 'bits').
Both have been stood upright in a washing up bowl for about 18 hours now and appear to have stopped bubbling and fizzing. Is this normal? Initially I thought perhaps the yeast or sugar had all been used up but 500g seemed to be an adequate volume of sugar from the different videos and articles I've read and watched. Also yeast is self-replicating so essentially it's not going to run out as long as their is sugar present correct...? I thought perhaps the yeast may have died but the boiled water was cooled first and was merely warm. They've been kept at room temperature.
I don't have a proper airlock on the bottles, the lids are merely placed on top as I have widely read that this is sufficient to allow the CO2 to escape and the pressure won't allow any O2 in. I have actually ordered 2 proper airlocks for the 2nd batch when ever that may be.
I had an issue with experiment-2 where everything bubbled and fizzled and completely overflowed out in kind of a thick sludge. This didn't happen with experiment-1 and the only difference between the 2 is the satsuma juice, the bottles and methods were the same, otherwise identical quantities of sugar and yeast and both boiled cooled water from the same container.
From what I've gathered really the type of yeast doesn't matter if you're really just starting out for a practice. I'm not concerned with the alcohol content or taste because it's just a test, I may not even drink this first batch whilst I'm learning the process.
Can anyone provide this aspiring noob with some pointers?
Kind regards
Today I'm attempting my first sugar wine doing it deliberately as simplistically as I can. I've been reading and watching videos for a long time as I've been worried about things such as hygiene, exploding containers, poisoning, yeasts not working, using wrong yeasts, wrong sugars, not enough of either, too much of either, whether airlocks are truly necessary, how long should the process take etc. So today I've done 2 experiments:-
Experiment 1:
1L cleaned bottle full to the shoulder with cooled boiled water.
Added 500g of granulated sugar and a couple of grams of dried active yeast.
Experiment 2:
1L cleaned bottle full to the shoulder with cooled boiled water.
Added 500g of granulated sugar and a couple of grams of dried active yeast.
Some squeezed satsuma juice (4 satsumas, ensured no 'bits').
Both have been stood upright in a washing up bowl for about 18 hours now and appear to have stopped bubbling and fizzing. Is this normal? Initially I thought perhaps the yeast or sugar had all been used up but 500g seemed to be an adequate volume of sugar from the different videos and articles I've read and watched. Also yeast is self-replicating so essentially it's not going to run out as long as their is sugar present correct...? I thought perhaps the yeast may have died but the boiled water was cooled first and was merely warm. They've been kept at room temperature.
I don't have a proper airlock on the bottles, the lids are merely placed on top as I have widely read that this is sufficient to allow the CO2 to escape and the pressure won't allow any O2 in. I have actually ordered 2 proper airlocks for the 2nd batch when ever that may be.
I had an issue with experiment-2 where everything bubbled and fizzled and completely overflowed out in kind of a thick sludge. This didn't happen with experiment-1 and the only difference between the 2 is the satsuma juice, the bottles and methods were the same, otherwise identical quantities of sugar and yeast and both boiled cooled water from the same container.
From what I've gathered really the type of yeast doesn't matter if you're really just starting out for a practice. I'm not concerned with the alcohol content or taste because it's just a test, I may not even drink this first batch whilst I'm learning the process.
Can anyone provide this aspiring noob with some pointers?
Kind regards