Good evening to all.
I am 100% new to wine, I have just pitched yeast on my first gallon of raspberry wine.
I have made mashes before and I am kinda stuck on aging and 'secondary ferment' vs clarifying. I just cleared a mash so I could get it ready for production. Cold crashed it? I popped it out on the deck over night and she went from finished ferment to clear overnight.
My question? If all I read and watch states that racking is intended to remove sediment (lees) and allow you to you move on to the next stage of clarification is cold craching not an ideal option to get a drinkable product after initial ferment is complete?
I struggle to understand what is happening if sg is showing a completed fermentation, ie. all sugar is converted to alcohol, yet a second ferment is required to clear the product. The need for campden tablets to stop an additional ferment is where I get lost. Why continue to ferment? I understand the risk of acetobacter and a change from a young wine to vinegar. I think I get aging. Mellowing flavors and allowing things to blend as things mature, likely exposing more complex flavors? I think I also get that certain ferments with more complex elements will benefit from time allowing more to develop, but when making a simple berry wine is the racking just intended to clarify and temperatures can accompish what otherwise just takes time?
Is yeast still suspended after a cold crash although 'clarified'? Will this create a secondary ferment if immediately bottled?
Thanks for any clarification.
I am 100% new to wine, I have just pitched yeast on my first gallon of raspberry wine.
I have made mashes before and I am kinda stuck on aging and 'secondary ferment' vs clarifying. I just cleared a mash so I could get it ready for production. Cold crashed it? I popped it out on the deck over night and she went from finished ferment to clear overnight.
My question? If all I read and watch states that racking is intended to remove sediment (lees) and allow you to you move on to the next stage of clarification is cold craching not an ideal option to get a drinkable product after initial ferment is complete?
I struggle to understand what is happening if sg is showing a completed fermentation, ie. all sugar is converted to alcohol, yet a second ferment is required to clear the product. The need for campden tablets to stop an additional ferment is where I get lost. Why continue to ferment? I understand the risk of acetobacter and a change from a young wine to vinegar. I think I get aging. Mellowing flavors and allowing things to blend as things mature, likely exposing more complex flavors? I think I also get that certain ferments with more complex elements will benefit from time allowing more to develop, but when making a simple berry wine is the racking just intended to clarify and temperatures can accompish what otherwise just takes time?
Is yeast still suspended after a cold crash although 'clarified'? Will this create a secondary ferment if immediately bottled?
Thanks for any clarification.