Buon Vino Mini-Jet

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bilbo-in-maine

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My kind wife presented me with a Mini-Jet filter last weekend and I just happened to have a Viognier white wine kit ready to bottle, so I felt it would be a great guinea pig project for filtering.

The machine comes with motorized filter unit and all necessary tubing, but doesn't have filter pads in the box. They have to be ordered separately. Three pads are needed at each filtering session. The choice of pads are #1 coarse, #2 polishing and 3# sterile (.5 micron passing.) Instructions are clear and mention that in addition to using the unit for filtering, it can also be used for racking by rearranging the tubing and bypassing the filtration section.

The unit looks like this:
2005-12-29_141119_filter1.JPG

I have the various tubes attached. The intake from full carboy is on the lower right side. Wine passes through the pump section and comes out through the short tube at center right and into the filter section behind the shiny steel plate. It is routed through the three paper filters and emerges at the upper left tube and flows to the receiving carboy or primary. The tube at the bottom drains seepage from the filters into a catch vessel which can be dumped into the source carboy right at the end to be filtered along with the rest.

Here are two views from the sides showing the spaces between plastic filter plates where the paper filters are inserted. The black hand knobs are tightened down before filtering.
2005-12-29_141842_filter2.JPG


2005-12-29_141909_filter3.JPG



The Viognier had sat for several additional weeks after the minimum time per kit instructions and was quite clear. I wondered just how much clearer it could get by filtering. The coarse pads weren't appropriate for such clear wine, so I used the #2's. Here is the wine before filtering (you are seeing a bottle of wine behind the carboy in the first shot):
2005-12-29_142246_before1.JPG


2005-12-29_142310_before2.JPG



Instructions say to soak the filter pads for several minutes in water before inserting in the filter unit:
2005-12-29_142529_soak.JPG



I remembered to prepare and add 1/4 tsp. of k-meta to the receiving carboy!
2005-12-29_142648_kmeta.JPG



I also soaked the pieces of tubing in B-Brite cleanser for several minutes and then doused in k-meta before installing on the filter unit.
2005-12-29_142822_clean.JPG



Here is everything set up at the supply carboy shortly after I started the pump and began filtering.
2005-12-29_143724_setup1.JPG


And a shot of the receiving carboy and catch vessel for the seepage tray.
2005-12-29_143834_setup2.JPG


Here is the whole setup several minutes after starting.
2005-12-29_143952_begin.JPG


A different view while underway:
2005-12-29_144122_underway.JPG



Filtering time was about ten minutes. Unfortunately I didn't think to time it. I was too busy thinking about watching tubing connections and watching for leaks around the pads. Here is the empty:
2005-12-29_144457_the_empty.JPG


And the final filtered:
2005-12-29_144552_finished.JPG


2005-12-29_144703_the_full.JPG



Here is the interesting part - How much clearer is the filtered wine? I show before and after photos:

Before</span> side view
2005-12-29_145552_before2.JPG


After</span> side view
2005-12-29_150414_after2.JPG


Before</span></span> front view
2005-12-29_150008_before1.JPG


After</span></span> front/side view
2005-12-29_150303_after3.JPG



To be truthful, I didn't feel that the clarity of the wine changed that much, just by looking at it. I disassembled the filter unit to take out the used pads, expecting to see some sediment.
2005-12-29_150705_used_filters.JPG


A closeup of one shows that there really wasn't much sediment to begin with! All three looked this way:
2005-12-29_150822_sediment.JPG


The wine seems to have brightened up some, but without trying the #3 filter pads right after using the #2's, I don't know if an even greater difference can be achieved. I don't think this wine needs to be any better than it is.

I look forward to using the Mini-Jet on several of my light colored scratch fruit wines in the near future to see if there is a more dramatic change in clarity. We've seen great before and after pictures of some of Martina's home made wines. As far as the Viognier goes, I feel that it cleared on its own very well, a tribute I guess to the kit process. It is now safely bottled and in the cellar, and the long wait before drinking begins again.
smiley5.gif
 
It looks like it bightened (polished) it up pretty good to me... I have used mine on 3 batches so far, a pinot grigio which did not really need it, it was a little brighter when I was done. Two scratch wines looked clear but they were dark so it was hard to tell but, there was a good bit of goo on the pads when I was done. All and all, I am happy that I got it...


My father has had a hard time getting a wine to filter through the .5 even after it has been through a #2. Said he couldn't tighten the pads up enough to keep them from leaking either...
 
Beautiful how-to, Bilbo!


Don't worry about the before-and-after pics. I used quite cloudy wines to demonstrate my filter. Actually, a big no-no when filtering.
smiley9.gif



Looks great! Congrats!





M.
 
You guys are so lucky. Santa brought me shirts and pants and not much
else.

Oh for a filter!!!
 
Santa brough me a gravity filter , It takes a long time to filter 5 gallons but it is clear, I just get it going and go do something else.


Harry
 
Nice Job Bill on the How To with the filter and I ask Santa for one also but didn't get it.
smiley19.gif
 
Nice pictoral! Thanks for your work. It's a beautiful wine. I think it brightened it, but I just had my first sip of coffee for the day so what do I know?
 
TO anyone with this filter kit, now that they've had some time to use it. I have a question:

Have you noticed any flavor change?

For a while I was looking into filtering wines, but the more I read the more chance it had to strip your wine of subtle flavors...???

Let me know your experiences, maybe I"ll change my mind and buy one after... do like that clear wine.
thx,
Ryan
 
rshosted said:
TO anyone with this filter kit, now that they've had some time to use it. I have a question:

Have you noticed any flavor change?

For a while I was looking into filtering wines, but the more I read the more chance it had to strip your wine of subtle flavors...???

Let me know your experiences, maybe I"ll change my mind and buy one after... do like that clear wine.
thx,
Ryan


I have read this too but I have read more that states stripping your wine of any flavor from filtering is plain nonsense! Get the filter if you want one.
 
I will tell you my experience.


Stripping of color -no, of tastes - no. Particles, yes. Don't forget the particles also have the color of the wine, so it's deceiving that filters strip the color. You might change the color, but that's not due to the filter -- it's the particles. Here's an example of that in an unfiltered wine. (Chrysanthemum)


2005-12-02_142454_mum.jpg
2005-12-29_175038_2005-12-29_mum.jpg



This is one and the same wine. That is natural. Filtering just speeds it up.
smiley1.gif
Edited by: MedPretzel
 
Ryan - I think what people find is that after filtering the wine does change
taste in that it seems flat, without character. This is due to the shock of the
filtering process, since the wine is sheared as it is pushed through the pads
under pressure. All it needs is time to regain character, just as it needs time
after bottling to recover from bottle shock. I've heard that these small filters
available to the home winemaker just don't have the capability to negatively
affect the wine. Like Masta says, feel free to try one out.

Bill
 
Well, guess I don't have to worry about making MY Mini-Jet tutorial, you beat me to it. I remembered to take some pics the other day so I to could contribute to the forums. Day late and a dollar sort I guess.


Nice work BTW.


Smurfe
smiley1.gif
Edited by: smurfe
 
Ryan,


Go for it, at least the gravity filter. I filtered 2 galllons of Concord saturday, and it looks fantastic. It won't be tasted for many more months. Good luck.


Archer
 
I'm really hoping that Bert gets me a gravity filter for my birthday this month! I have 2 wines waiting to try it!
smiley2.gif



Hey! Did you all see there's going to be a contest?
 
Nice tutorial, Bill and I can tell a difference in the pictures.


Masta, we need to create a pictured tutorial section topic for ease of finding. Make it a non-postable thread.


According to Tim V. at Winexpert, using the #2 pad will not affect the flavor of your kit wine. The holes in the filter are way too big to capture those particles.
 
geocorn said:
Masta, we need to create a pictured tutorial section topic for ease of finding. Make it a non-postable thread.


I am on it Boss !
smiley36.gif
 
bilbo-in-maine said:
Ryan - I think what people find is that after filtering the wine does change
taste in that it seems flat, without character. This is due to the shock of the
filtering process, since the wine is sheared as it is pushed through the pads
under pressure. All it needs is time to regain character, just as it needs time
after bottling to recover from bottle shock. I've heard that these small filters
available to the home winemaker just don't have the capability to negatively
affect the wine. Like Masta says, feel free to try one out.

Bill


I agree with that statement I hear that it isbetter to wait1 month if you use the # 3 pad.<?:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:eek:ffice:eek:ffice" />


I have the same pump and I will be filtering my Viogner whit # 3 next week.


A good way to know how clear is your wine is to use a flashlight, put it against the carboy and you should see particles in your wine, if you don’t particles good job.
 
Mario - Good luck with filtering next week, and let us know what your
experience is. Some photos are always fun too!
smiley2.gif
 
rshosted said:
TO anyone with this filter kit, now that they've had some time to use it. I have a question:

Have you noticed any flavor change?

For a while I was looking into filtering wines, but the more I read the more chance it had to strip your wine of subtle flavors...???

Let me know your experiences, maybe I"ll change my mind and buy one after... do like that clear wine.
thx,
Ryan


One of my friend is a wine juge and he told me to put 1 teaspoon of acid (can beacid blend, tartaric, malic or citric) in one gallon of cold water and run this solution in your pump with the filters before you filter you wine. He said it would prevent the taste of the filters to go in your wine. Well is a juge so he must know what it is talking about. So I did that with my 2 last batchs.
 

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