What is the difference between the two, and yes, I know one is in a bottle! What changes from one to the other? I always thought that the bulk aging was better as 'it's all there', I have heard of 'bottle shock', is that the issue?
Bottle shock is likely to happen no matter when you bottle. It's something I simply accept and let the bottles rest long enough to get past it. A normal dose of K-meta at bottling helps.Ok, so it's a corkage issue. so why don't we bulk age longer?
This is a complicated subject. We get micro-oxygenation in the barrel, which benefits the wine. The operative term is "micro", meaning tiny doses.Although I think I understand that some wines may benefit from some oxygen exposure.
A general statement is that reductive wines (low oxygen) have better fruity aromas. This is especially valuable in country wines and whites. Red wines/ tannic wines can improve when micro oxygenated. This involves polyphenols and tannins binding oxygen, and being removed from solution. ,,, Who likes to drink an overly tannic red wine?Ok, so it's a corkage issue. so why don't we bulk age longer?
Although I think I understand that some wines may benefit from some oxygen exposure.
That's an excellent question. I suspect the most definitive answer is "maybe".So is there a point where the benefit of bulk aging becomes minimal and then switch to bottle aging?
Most beginners want concrete rules, e.g., do this and that will occur. Unfortunately, winemaking doesn't work that way. Most of the time, things go in a given direction, but sometimes Mother Nature or Dionysus take things in a different direction.I learned early that there are very few concrete rules in wine making. 'Kinda", "sorta", "maybe", and "wine is very forgiving" are often how things go. I was hoping for a good rule of thumb and you provided!!!
I typically bulk for one year. With every batch I bottle I put three bottles aside and try them 3-5 years down the road. Some of these bottles have surprised me.I had asked roughly the same question a while ago. No chemical/Black magic in bulk vs 750ml. It came down to : Carboy, not too accessible. Bottle aging, too easy to access.
niceI typically bulk for one year. With every batch I bottle I put three bottles aside and try them 3-5 years down the road. Some of these bottles have surprised me.
Well yes but it’s only 3 bottles. However you would be surprised how quickly they mount up.nice
patience is the key
Nope -- aging matters just as much for kits as for any wine.Kits, I don't know. Likely, it does not matter. You should be making wine from grapes after a kit or two.
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