My main winemaking project for this year is to make Syrah for the first time. I arranged to buy 1/4 ton of grapes from a grower ~40 miles away and laid in my supplies: yeast (Rockpile/RP-15), Go-Ferm, Fermaid-O and a couple of 32-gal Brutes to use as primary fermenters. I estimated ~53 gallons of must from 1/4T would fit nicely into my primaries with space for the cap to rise.
Since I don't have a means of heating my fermentation room (aka workshop), I also figured I'd need a way to ensure good extraction from the skins. So for the first time I planned to forsake the all-natural approach and use macerating enzymes (Lallzyme-EX), enological tannins (FT Rouge) and for good measure a couple of aquarium heaters to get my must temperature up into the high 70s/low 80s. Better winemaking through chemistry!
The vineyard manager called the pick for Wednesday evening, so I left my 1/4T bin over there the day before. When I arrived to pick up... the bin was overflowing with grapes. Score!
It wasn't until later that I realized that I now had a problem... nowhere to put the must. My current inventory of Brutes (2x32 gal, plus 10gal) would barely accommodate everything, with no room for the cap. So instead of crushing first thing this morning we headed off to the hardware store to pick up a couple of 44-gallon Brutes. This was almost as far away as the vineyard, so 3x 60-80 mile round trips in as many days... But it was worth it since the crush went well and we were able to almost fill the 2 new bins with a nice amount of headspace:
Added Lallzyme and mixed it in, then sprinkled KMBS/K-meta on top of each bin (30ppm based on must volume) to ward off any premature native fermentation.
Numbers for the initial juice:
Brix 23.0
pH 3.23
TA 6.4 g/L
Those are pretty good numbers IMO; pH on the low side though this is just the juice from crushing (no berries) and I'm expecting that it will 'soak up' overnight. I'll measure again in the morning (perhaps a blenderized and strained sample) but I'm not expecting to need any adjustments.
Initial must temperature was just under 70F, so I think I will forego the planned cold soak and pitch yeast tomorrow.
Since I don't have a means of heating my fermentation room (aka workshop), I also figured I'd need a way to ensure good extraction from the skins. So for the first time I planned to forsake the all-natural approach and use macerating enzymes (Lallzyme-EX), enological tannins (FT Rouge) and for good measure a couple of aquarium heaters to get my must temperature up into the high 70s/low 80s. Better winemaking through chemistry!
The vineyard manager called the pick for Wednesday evening, so I left my 1/4T bin over there the day before. When I arrived to pick up... the bin was overflowing with grapes. Score!
It wasn't until later that I realized that I now had a problem... nowhere to put the must. My current inventory of Brutes (2x32 gal, plus 10gal) would barely accommodate everything, with no room for the cap. So instead of crushing first thing this morning we headed off to the hardware store to pick up a couple of 44-gallon Brutes. This was almost as far away as the vineyard, so 3x 60-80 mile round trips in as many days... But it was worth it since the crush went well and we were able to almost fill the 2 new bins with a nice amount of headspace:
Added Lallzyme and mixed it in, then sprinkled KMBS/K-meta on top of each bin (30ppm based on must volume) to ward off any premature native fermentation.
Numbers for the initial juice:
Brix 23.0
pH 3.23
TA 6.4 g/L
Those are pretty good numbers IMO; pH on the low side though this is just the juice from crushing (no berries) and I'm expecting that it will 'soak up' overnight. I'll measure again in the morning (perhaps a blenderized and strained sample) but I'm not expecting to need any adjustments.
Initial must temperature was just under 70F, so I think I will forego the planned cold soak and pitch yeast tomorrow.