penguinluvinman
Junior
- Joined
- May 1, 2021
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Thanks to everyone who assisted me in my previous thread. I did get a large batch of around 60 gallons/220ish lbs of blueberry wine going, and I think it's proceeding pretty well so far.
We're on day 12 after inoculation, and my SG reading is finally at 0.998, so assuming it holds steady I'll probably rack it on Monday.
I've noticed some harshness in my tastings and it has some bite to it, so I've been thinking the acidity is a little high. I just got a pH meter in today, and my first reading came in at about 2.5. I have TA test coming as well but it has not arrived yet.
So now my question is on addressing the harshness or adjusting the pH before I rack it. From my research it seems like my best options would be to add some sodium/potassium/calcium citrate or bicarbonate, or possibly trying MLF.
Any advice on which of these would be the best option, or is there a better alternative? If adding citrate or carbonate as a buffer is the best move, is there any way to calculate how much I'll need, or should I just add a little at a time and keep checking?
I have a good bit of potassium bicarbonate on hand so if I could use it that would be ideal. It says that 3.4 grams will raise one gallon of wine by 0.1 pH, so using that math about 30 oz would get me up to around 3.2 pH.
I also know I need to add some tannin, which should also be arriving tomorrow (the curse of not having a local homebrew shop), so could that also have an affect to help on the acidic taste?
I don't know much about MLF, but is it as simple as pitching some new bacteria and letting it roll for another week or so?
Thanks again in advance for your advice!
We're on day 12 after inoculation, and my SG reading is finally at 0.998, so assuming it holds steady I'll probably rack it on Monday.
I've noticed some harshness in my tastings and it has some bite to it, so I've been thinking the acidity is a little high. I just got a pH meter in today, and my first reading came in at about 2.5. I have TA test coming as well but it has not arrived yet.
So now my question is on addressing the harshness or adjusting the pH before I rack it. From my research it seems like my best options would be to add some sodium/potassium/calcium citrate or bicarbonate, or possibly trying MLF.
Any advice on which of these would be the best option, or is there a better alternative? If adding citrate or carbonate as a buffer is the best move, is there any way to calculate how much I'll need, or should I just add a little at a time and keep checking?
I have a good bit of potassium bicarbonate on hand so if I could use it that would be ideal. It says that 3.4 grams will raise one gallon of wine by 0.1 pH, so using that math about 30 oz would get me up to around 3.2 pH.
I also know I need to add some tannin, which should also be arriving tomorrow (the curse of not having a local homebrew shop), so could that also have an affect to help on the acidic taste?
I don't know much about MLF, but is it as simple as pitching some new bacteria and letting it roll for another week or so?
Thanks again in advance for your advice!
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