You don't combine yeast as one will dominate over the other so you are not getting what you had hoped for. You ferment 2 batches of wine separately with different yeast and then combine them together after they have fermented to dry. You get the full benefit of the two different yeast strains in that way.
This is exactly what I was getting at.
Nice post Deezil thanks!No two yeasts are the same.
Some are dominant, some arent.
Some contribute more aromatic notes
Some bring more mouthfeel/body
Some highlight certain characteristics - spice, fruit, etc
Some take more nutrients than others
Some make more SO2 than others - can impact the MLF-ability of the wine post-ferment
Some have higher ABV tolerances
They've all been isolated from different areas - France, Germany, Italy, Austrailia, California - and yeasts from these different regions tend to lend well to those area's traditional styles
When you take all these different facets, and align them with the fermentation you have in mind, you can start to see how some of the more "traditional" yeast blends have came to be...
Like D254 + D80, in 'larger' red wines
Or say you're making a fruit wine (Apple?), and you want a decent amount of body from the yeast, but also want to reduce malic acid content and enhance the fruity aromas of the wine.. What to do?
Split the batch per your % of fruity-to-mouthfeel
Pitch 71B-1122 for malic acid reduction and enhancement of fruity esters
Pitch D-47 for its mouthfeel/body enhancing ability
Both have roughly the same ABV & nutritional requirements
D-47 doesnt create enough SO2 to inhibit MLF
When you blend them correctly, you end up with the 'best of both worlds' - fruity aromatics, a slightly reduced malic sharpness, enhanced body/mouthfeel texture, the ability to follow-up with MLF if malic acid wasnt reduced enough..
This is just a simple example... But you can see how learning about as many different yeast strains as you can, is just adding more tools to your toolbox, as Joe would say.
I totally agree. I think thats how great wines come to be. As Joe is always saying,you really do have to think outside the box.Why shouldn't they try?
Isn't the goal of WMT to help winemakers and promote thinking outside of the box
I'm very surprised to see that posted, telling others that it shouldn't be tried is a major disservice.
Based on other posts, you obviously do not agree with adding two different yeasts nor do you believe it can actually produce a wine with unique characteristics, and that is fine, but to tell everyone that it shouldn't be done is counter productive, furthermore, if it isn't tried, how will they ever know if it works?
If we don't take s few chances and try new methods or techniques, we might as well hang it all up and drink boxed wine.
I encourage everyone to step outside of their comfort zone and try a new technique.
As long as you do your research, and you are aware of the pros and cons, take a leap of faith.
If we don't, we will end up hitting a brick wall.
You have an enormous safety net here at WMT, there will be someone that has tried what you are attempting, just ask, Google it, email manufacturers, whatever it takes.
If we didn't do this throughout history, we'd still be living in caves.
Why shouldn't they try?
Isn't the goal of WMT to help winemakers and promote thinking outside of the box
I'm very surprised to see that posted, telling others that it shouldn't be tried is a major disservice.
Based on other posts, you obviously do not agree with adding two different yeasts nor do you believe it can actually produce a wine with unique characteristics, and that is fine, but to tell everyone that it shouldn't be done is counter productive, furthermore, if it isn't tried, how will they ever know if it works?
If we don't take s few chances and try new methods or techniques, we might as well hang it all up and drink boxed wine.
I encourage everyone to step outside of their comfort zone and try a new technique.
As long as you do your research, and you are aware of the pros and cons, take a leap of faith.
If we don't, we will end up hitting a brick wall.
You have an enormous safety net here at WMT, there will be someone that has tried what you are attempting, just ask, Google it, email manufacturers, whatever it takes.
If we didn't do this throughout history, we'd still be living in caves.
I didn't intend to blast you, this is the way you took it, just because I disagree, doesn't mean it is a blast.Next time you decide you want to blast me from atop your high horse, I would suggest you do it via PM.
for testing purposes...i started my 3 gallon batch of pineapple .
1st day i pitched yeast (Cote des Blancs) to get the fruit aroma...as much as possible, I started wiht sg of 1.110...
after two days, i pitched red star premier curvee, to get the abv up.
its at .990 today, and still has a strong smell of pineapple, and the abv is way up there.
so i got the fruit taste, aroma from the blanc
and got the high abv from the curvee.
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