I started my first wine in 35 years last week.
I started the Moscato and it had an SG of 1.071.
After 4 days at 72F the SG was at 1.007
I moved the bucket down to the basement last night since that is where I'll store the Carboy after racking.
This morning the temperature was 66F and SG was 1.001. Kit says when it gets under 1.010 to rack to a carboy.
I racked to Carboy using the AIO and it went off without a hitch.
Only thing is that the stopper for the carboy didn't want to stay in, I tried wet, dry, straight in and turning. It's a rubber stopper with hole for the bubbler #7. I ended up reverting to my farmboy days and used a handful of zip ties to keep it in (at least I didn't use duct tape!).
Sanitizing the carboy, stoppers, tubing ... takes longer than actually doing the transfer.
So now I get to wait 10 days+ and check it again.
It seems like a lot more washing than anything, but for some reason wine making is fun!
I did pick up the Daniel Pambianchi book "Techniques in Home Winemaking", it's a great read so far, highly recommended here on the forum and even though I'm only 1/3 of the way through it, I'd recommend it as well.
AJ
ps: I'll update in 10 days or so.
I started the Moscato and it had an SG of 1.071.
After 4 days at 72F the SG was at 1.007
I moved the bucket down to the basement last night since that is where I'll store the Carboy after racking.
This morning the temperature was 66F and SG was 1.001. Kit says when it gets under 1.010 to rack to a carboy.
I racked to Carboy using the AIO and it went off without a hitch.
Only thing is that the stopper for the carboy didn't want to stay in, I tried wet, dry, straight in and turning. It's a rubber stopper with hole for the bubbler #7. I ended up reverting to my farmboy days and used a handful of zip ties to keep it in (at least I didn't use duct tape!).
Sanitizing the carboy, stoppers, tubing ... takes longer than actually doing the transfer.
So now I get to wait 10 days+ and check it again.
It seems like a lot more washing than anything, but for some reason wine making is fun!
I did pick up the Daniel Pambianchi book "Techniques in Home Winemaking", it's a great read so far, highly recommended here on the forum and even though I'm only 1/3 of the way through it, I'd recommend it as well.
AJ
ps: I'll update in 10 days or so.