To add, it is going to need some sugar added back in to pull those flavors out.
I just racked into a carboy for aging. I added the kmeta and sorbate in anticipation for backsweetening. Given it has to age a year before being acceptable for drinking would you start backsweetening now or give it a few months before starting to backsweeten?
I bought a bottle of blueberry wine from our local winery that also owns a blueberry field and puts out a blueberry wine once a year and i measured the sg of there wine, it was 1.010. I was thinking of waiting till my first reracking maybe in a couple months and backsweetening from .990 to 1.000 and then put it away for another 3 months till i rack again and give it a taste before sweetening again.
I've made several blueberry wines the past several years. They don't start tasting good until 8 to 10 months of aging.
Buried the needle on this blueberry wine. Looks a tad under .990, bordering .988, Smells great, tastes like, well hopefully it will come around.
Sorry but I'm confused. Most times folks don't backsweeten until just before bottling, AFTER aging the wine. There is a sharpness to a new wine that covers tastes as the wine ages you will find you need less backsweetening.
Better to wait until just before bottling time to backsweeten. You could end up with a wine much sweeter than you'd like.
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