WinBase
Active Member
Hi
could anyone offer me some help and advice on the following questions please
i'm a relatively new wine maker, (lapsed for many years but starting again since last july) and up to press have 12 gallons of various country wine conditioning in demi-johns in a cool cupboard at around 12c.
2 weeks ago i took my strawberry wine out that has been bulk aging since 2nd aug and was well pleased just how crystal clear it was, and when i came to taste it could tell it's really getting there, so decided to backsweeten it a tad and bottle, leaving until the summer to drink.
so...
I racked it off the small amount of lee's, and added 1/2 teaspoon of potassium sorbate, (youngs fermentation stopper) to be on the safe side, with a campden tablet to each gallon, mixed well and left for a few days before adding a well mixed sugar/water solution in the proportions to achieve the taste i wanted, and it tasted great for one so young. I observed the brew for 10 days or so to make sure no further fermentation was taking place (it wasn't and i didnt really expect it to anyway), HOWEVER the wine now is slightly 'hazy' and not as clear as it originally was before adding the fermentation stopper and sugar, which is a bit of a worry as i'm trying to make quality brew's and not student bedsit plonk. I dont want to drink even slightly cloudy wine myself, or give my friends it, i would see it as failure, so my questions are these:
1) will the haziness clear if i keep it in the demijohn for say another few months?, if so approx how long would one expect it to take. you can still see through the demijohn, just not as well as before.
2) am i ok to continue to leave the backsweetened wine bulk aging (obviously under airlock), or will the fact that i have already added sweetener affect anything
3) should i need to add another campden tablet before finally bottling. i added one pre-fermentation, one after racking when fermentation was complete (a month after pitching the yeast), and another when i racked before backsweetening.
4) is it really necessary to add fermentation stopper at all to a wine that has been conditioning for so long and stopped fermenting in the first place? i plan to leave all my backsweetened wine in a demijohnn for a week or two after backsweetening until bottling anyway just to be on the safe side as i dont want any fermenting in the bottle, in case there is a little residue yeast hanging around in suspension, but if possible after this experience, i would like to avoid adding potassium sorbate if possible, so is there a risk? i understand it could start fermenting again, but if it's still in the demijohn surely not a worry? at a guess all i would need to do is add a little more sweetener later as the yeast has a maximum alcohol threshold anyway (doesnt it lol)
i'm no fan of additives i dont need, but not bothered if i really should do to get the best results, (such as adding pectolase pre-fermentation), so what do you do, and any advice from those more experienced than myself would be great. i have searched the web and there is a lot out there but not quite exactly what im looking for.
regards
Bob
could anyone offer me some help and advice on the following questions please
i'm a relatively new wine maker, (lapsed for many years but starting again since last july) and up to press have 12 gallons of various country wine conditioning in demi-johns in a cool cupboard at around 12c.
2 weeks ago i took my strawberry wine out that has been bulk aging since 2nd aug and was well pleased just how crystal clear it was, and when i came to taste it could tell it's really getting there, so decided to backsweeten it a tad and bottle, leaving until the summer to drink.
so...
I racked it off the small amount of lee's, and added 1/2 teaspoon of potassium sorbate, (youngs fermentation stopper) to be on the safe side, with a campden tablet to each gallon, mixed well and left for a few days before adding a well mixed sugar/water solution in the proportions to achieve the taste i wanted, and it tasted great for one so young. I observed the brew for 10 days or so to make sure no further fermentation was taking place (it wasn't and i didnt really expect it to anyway), HOWEVER the wine now is slightly 'hazy' and not as clear as it originally was before adding the fermentation stopper and sugar, which is a bit of a worry as i'm trying to make quality brew's and not student bedsit plonk. I dont want to drink even slightly cloudy wine myself, or give my friends it, i would see it as failure, so my questions are these:
1) will the haziness clear if i keep it in the demijohn for say another few months?, if so approx how long would one expect it to take. you can still see through the demijohn, just not as well as before.
2) am i ok to continue to leave the backsweetened wine bulk aging (obviously under airlock), or will the fact that i have already added sweetener affect anything
3) should i need to add another campden tablet before finally bottling. i added one pre-fermentation, one after racking when fermentation was complete (a month after pitching the yeast), and another when i racked before backsweetening.
4) is it really necessary to add fermentation stopper at all to a wine that has been conditioning for so long and stopped fermenting in the first place? i plan to leave all my backsweetened wine in a demijohnn for a week or two after backsweetening until bottling anyway just to be on the safe side as i dont want any fermenting in the bottle, in case there is a little residue yeast hanging around in suspension, but if possible after this experience, i would like to avoid adding potassium sorbate if possible, so is there a risk? i understand it could start fermenting again, but if it's still in the demijohn surely not a worry? at a guess all i would need to do is add a little more sweetener later as the yeast has a maximum alcohol threshold anyway (doesnt it lol)
i'm no fan of additives i dont need, but not bothered if i really should do to get the best results, (such as adding pectolase pre-fermentation), so what do you do, and any advice from those more experienced than myself would be great. i have searched the web and there is a lot out there but not quite exactly what im looking for.
regards
Bob