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A couple of weeks ago I posted a question here concerning yeast choice(s) for Cab Franc and Carmenere. Several of you responded and I thank you for your opinions.
The grapes arrived more or less on time. We scheduled in advance but when I called to confirm pickup but the distributor footballed around on allowing pickup times. After a couple day wait I pressed him and was able to pick up the next day. I asked the guy on the dock when the grapes arrived. He told me he "thought, don't quote me" the grapes arrived a day early. Then he proceeded to tell me that he started on the dock but has worked in the office for four or five years. Apparently they have not been able to get people to work so he was pressed into service. At least the guy is getting paid at his regular rate.
We picked them up in the Strip District at 08:30 on 13 May and got home an hour later. We laid out our work area on the patio and washed out the fermenters. Then we assembled the crusher-destemmer, which we transported from off site storage the day before. Which, promptly didn't work. We spent about fifteen minutes fussing around with it to get everything in order and another ten minutes fooling around with the gap between the rollers. Lesson learned: Make sure your equipment works the day before.
My partner in crime cleaning a forty four gallon Brute. The ones on the side are twenties.
It was time to sort the grapes.
These are eighteen pound lugs. Five Cab Franc and ten Carmenere for a total of two hundred and seventy pounds. We've never worked with Chilean grapes before this. We've also not worked with Carmenere. The quality of the grapes was surprising. Some of the boxes had very little mog. None of them had much in the way of mold or damaged fruit. Out of fifteen boxes we culled less than ten pounds. Of that, four or five bunches were simply under ripe. Still make for good table grapes.
The berries on both are on the small size. Not as small as Petit Verdot, but pretty small. We had to fine tune the gap on the rollers a couple of times until we got it right.
Using two buckets is a good idea. I used to have a large, square container but it got re-tasked in our last move. Over all, only lost a pound or two after harvesting from the plastic sheet covering the concrete slab.
Cellar work:
When I asked the question about yeast, CDrew posted in the thread with an offer of some Avante yeast. He sent that along with some D-21. A big thanks to CDrew! It is everything he said it is.
We drew off samples and ran the labs. The Carmenere had an SG of 1.086 and the pH was 3.55. The Cab Franc was at 1.083 and 3.52. We considered adding some sugar but nixed the idea. On the east coast, we've never seen grapes with specs this good. So we left them alone.
Took a liter of Carmenere juice and half a liter of Cab Franc to make starters. Added Go Ferm Protect Evolution to the Carmenere and regular Go Ferm to the Cab Franc juice along with approximately a gram of Avante per estimated gallon for each. The Go Ferm performed as usual. The Protect Evolution took off like a rocket. The following evening I pitched the starters. The next afternoon I added doses of Fermaid K to each fermenter.
The grapes arrived more or less on time. We scheduled in advance but when I called to confirm pickup but the distributor footballed around on allowing pickup times. After a couple day wait I pressed him and was able to pick up the next day. I asked the guy on the dock when the grapes arrived. He told me he "thought, don't quote me" the grapes arrived a day early. Then he proceeded to tell me that he started on the dock but has worked in the office for four or five years. Apparently they have not been able to get people to work so he was pressed into service. At least the guy is getting paid at his regular rate.
We picked them up in the Strip District at 08:30 on 13 May and got home an hour later. We laid out our work area on the patio and washed out the fermenters. Then we assembled the crusher-destemmer, which we transported from off site storage the day before. Which, promptly didn't work. We spent about fifteen minutes fussing around with it to get everything in order and another ten minutes fooling around with the gap between the rollers. Lesson learned: Make sure your equipment works the day before.
My partner in crime cleaning a forty four gallon Brute. The ones on the side are twenties.
It was time to sort the grapes.
These are eighteen pound lugs. Five Cab Franc and ten Carmenere for a total of two hundred and seventy pounds. We've never worked with Chilean grapes before this. We've also not worked with Carmenere. The quality of the grapes was surprising. Some of the boxes had very little mog. None of them had much in the way of mold or damaged fruit. Out of fifteen boxes we culled less than ten pounds. Of that, four or five bunches were simply under ripe. Still make for good table grapes.
The berries on both are on the small size. Not as small as Petit Verdot, but pretty small. We had to fine tune the gap on the rollers a couple of times until we got it right.
Using two buckets is a good idea. I used to have a large, square container but it got re-tasked in our last move. Over all, only lost a pound or two after harvesting from the plastic sheet covering the concrete slab.
Cellar work:
When I asked the question about yeast, CDrew posted in the thread with an offer of some Avante yeast. He sent that along with some D-21. A big thanks to CDrew! It is everything he said it is.
We drew off samples and ran the labs. The Carmenere had an SG of 1.086 and the pH was 3.55. The Cab Franc was at 1.083 and 3.52. We considered adding some sugar but nixed the idea. On the east coast, we've never seen grapes with specs this good. So we left them alone.
Took a liter of Carmenere juice and half a liter of Cab Franc to make starters. Added Go Ferm Protect Evolution to the Carmenere and regular Go Ferm to the Cab Franc juice along with approximately a gram of Avante per estimated gallon for each. The Go Ferm performed as usual. The Protect Evolution took off like a rocket. The following evening I pitched the starters. The next afternoon I added doses of Fermaid K to each fermenter.
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