Aleman said:You don't . . . the yeast do
LeithR said:I brew initially in an open bucket with a loosely fitting lid, this is effectively Aerobic fermentation once you get a couple of inches of foam on top known as Krausen this is the beers initial vigorous fermentation, my practice is once that has settled down I then move the brew carefully into a closed fermenting vessel with an airlock this is Anaerobic fermentation.
To answer that question, Ideally you would transfer to under airlock once your yeast has switched from actively reproducing to making alcohol. it's difficult to know when this is happening, but generally once you start to see an active layer of yeast bubbles at the surface, that is a good sign. The other complication with wine is that particularly with coloured fruits you are also extracting colour . .so you need the alcohol to be present to extract colour. However the fruit forms a solid cap over the must protecting the must and alcohol from the oxidative effects of the air. Normally for the darker fruits I go for up to 5 days on the pulp (in a bucket), for white wines, particularly delicate flavoured ones I go for a maximum of 3 days. . . .If it's a juice wine, then I tend to ferment in a winemakers fermenter with the cap off until I see small clumps of yeast and bubbles on the surface . . .then the airlock goes onBrowserUk said:I guess my question reduces to: When should I stop allowing/deliberately incorporating oxygen into the must and seal things up under an airlock?
BrowserUk said:As I am just starting out, I'm trying to get a feel for a reliable starting point that won't require 10 years of failures before I hit on one that produces drinkable results :)
This advice is mostly true, but there are some incredibly bad techniques out there on the internet, and what works for one guy may just because he's been lucky . . . You may not be. . . . Must admit 7-10 days on the pulp seems incredibly long to me, I'd be afraid of off flavours developing as the fruit goes bad.Sly Fox said:I think if any of the methods you've read about were producing anything other than drinkable results, you would not have been reading about them in the first place. Don't sweat it!BrowserUk said:As I am just starting out, I'm trying to get a feel for a reliable starting point that won't require 10 years of failures before I hit on one that produces drinkable results :)
Aleman said:I apologise for shouting to those that are capable of reading my earlier comment
Which I also answered with much less acerbity.I even attempted to correct for my apparent misuse of the (an)aerobic terminology by re-phrasing and re-targeting my question to address the issue I'm trying to get to grips with.
Aleman said:Truthfully mate it wasn't aimed at you, if that was the way you read it, I apologise whole heartedly...
Aleman said:Which I also answered with much less acerbity.
BrowserUk said:If so, the question still returns to: How do I know when to stop stirring, seal the fv and add the airlock?
anthonyUK said:BrowserUk said:If so, the question still returns to: How do I know when to stop stirring, seal the fv and add the airlock?
I don't know about wine but for beer it isn't a question you would ask as you would pitch the correct amount of yeast cells for your batch to start with.
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