Noren
Junior
I started a blueberry wine on July 19 and have about 7-8 gallons (1 x 6 gallon carboy and 2 x 1 gallon glass jugs). (pH is about 3.2) I noticed that the sg has stuck at around 1.045 and doesn't show any signs of activity. I put it on a heating pad (pad on the counter and the carboy and jugs on top) and that brought the temp up to around 28 C (82 F). There was a persistent ring of foam on the top and slow bubbling but very slow progress on dropping the SG. Then I noticed a peculiar smell that I couldn't quite identify (I think my sense of smell is not what it used to be, but this was very noticable). Its gotten worse and now it smells like rotten eggs. The juice still tastes sweet and doesn't have an off taste, just a very bad off smell. I added some more yeast nutrient but it seemed to only give the foam a brownish color. Above the foam (on the top inside of the carboy) there was also a very light tint of green, as if it was algae, but I'm not sure about what it actually is or was. I also added another packet of yeast (EC 1118) but that hasn't helped either - no new bubbling activity. I tried degassing it several days in a row and have racked it to a new carboy and then also poured most of the liquid out into a primary bucket and splashed it around to try to get rid of the gas. Then I put it back into the carboy and added some Kmeta to counteract any effect of oxygen. Today I saw that there was no foam on top but it seemed like there was a long ring of the new yeast that had gathered just under the surface near the top, just clumped together, obviously not doing anything useful.
I talked with a local wine brewer and he mentioned that blueberries naturally produce their own potassium sorbate! I tried to find some more info about that and it seems that others have mentioned it also. (Last year I had a failed attempt at getting a blueberry wine to finish fermenting as well, so that's 2-0). Do any others on this forum have any experience like this and if so, is there any hope for my wine? I've read that potassium sorbate is a birth control for yeast, so it could be that there is just not enough active yeast in my wine. IF that's the case could a possible remedy be to hydrate a new batch of yeast outside the wine and let it multiply to a decent level and then add that mixture to the wine? If so, how long to wait until the yeast multiplies to a decent level that can ferment an entire carboy?
Any help is appreciated!
I talked with a local wine brewer and he mentioned that blueberries naturally produce their own potassium sorbate! I tried to find some more info about that and it seems that others have mentioned it also. (Last year I had a failed attempt at getting a blueberry wine to finish fermenting as well, so that's 2-0). Do any others on this forum have any experience like this and if so, is there any hope for my wine? I've read that potassium sorbate is a birth control for yeast, so it could be that there is just not enough active yeast in my wine. IF that's the case could a possible remedy be to hydrate a new batch of yeast outside the wine and let it multiply to a decent level and then add that mixture to the wine? If so, how long to wait until the yeast multiplies to a decent level that can ferment an entire carboy?
Any help is appreciated!