Paulie vino
Senior Member
This year Im making a grenache syrah blend, 2 lugs of grenache and one box of syrah. Brix was 23. I then measured the pH however I used opened 1 year old solutions to calibrate my meter so I'm not entirely sure how accurate these measurements are. I did a 2 point calibration so hopefully this improved the accuracy. The initial pH was 3.89 and the ta was around 0.5. The following morning I made an acid addition, mixed the must and let it sit for a hour or two then remeasured. The pH dropped to 3.43 and the ta was between 0.7 and 0.8 which should be a better place. I used about half of the calculated adjustment and I'm glad I did. This was my first time making an acid adjustment so I was cautions to avoid adding too much.
Some questions though:
1) I added yeast prior to the acid addition, so when I remeasured the brix it has dropped by about 0.5, would the start of fermentation impact the pH reading? Fermentation was just barely starting at the time I remeasured.
2) how does everyone else measure ta? I use a pH meter and add NaOH until the meter reaches 8.2. then use fermcalc to do the calculations.
3) when would be the next best time to measure pH or acid again? Can I do it during fermentation or shortly after it's done? I think I read somewhere that the dissolved CO2 may mess with the readings.
Some questions though:
1) I added yeast prior to the acid addition, so when I remeasured the brix it has dropped by about 0.5, would the start of fermentation impact the pH reading? Fermentation was just barely starting at the time I remeasured.
2) how does everyone else measure ta? I use a pH meter and add NaOH until the meter reaches 8.2. then use fermcalc to do the calculations.
3) when would be the next best time to measure pH or acid again? Can I do it during fermentation or shortly after it's done? I think I read somewhere that the dissolved CO2 may mess with the readings.