Okay. So I'm planning to make a weird wine out of root vegetables, tomato and lemon. The ingredients aren't really the point here. Let me explain ...
Usually I toss in all ingredients, add yeast, and let the process run its course. With this recipe I want the fermentation to run with root vegetables in the bucket and add tomato and lemon juice after it has finished.
Why?
Several sources tell me that fermentation converts citric acid into the sour tasting acetic acid found in vinegar. Because the dominating acid in tomatoes and lemons is citric I'm considering adding their juices after fermentation has finished. The post-fermentation addition will probably make up 10-15 % of the final volume. Of course the wine will become somewhat diluted. I'll make up for that up front.
Has anyone tried out this approach and what was your experience? May this approach somehow create any problems? Is my point about acid conversion valid?
-Rappatuz
Usually I toss in all ingredients, add yeast, and let the process run its course. With this recipe I want the fermentation to run with root vegetables in the bucket and add tomato and lemon juice after it has finished.
Why?
Several sources tell me that fermentation converts citric acid into the sour tasting acetic acid found in vinegar. Because the dominating acid in tomatoes and lemons is citric I'm considering adding their juices after fermentation has finished. The post-fermentation addition will probably make up 10-15 % of the final volume. Of course the wine will become somewhat diluted. I'll make up for that up front.
Has anyone tried out this approach and what was your experience? May this approach somehow create any problems? Is my point about acid conversion valid?
-Rappatuz