I have the RJS En Primeur Amarone kit with 2 kilos of wet grape skins. I'm excited about trying extended maceration (EM) but so far I just have plastic buckets and glass carboys from my home brewing set up. I may eventually buy a Speidel, or Big Mouth Bubbler, or Fermonster or something else with a wide mouth and tight seal, but I always read the 1, 2 & 3 star reviews and get scared off (mainly gasket issues both above - not a perfect seal, O-ring too thin / gets damaged / won't sit in lid; or below at the spigot - leaking, siphon tubes slipping off). As much as I welcome ideas about 'the perfect EM vessel', this post is really about whether I can do EM with what I have?
Basically, can I do a long primary with EM all in a glass 6.5 g carboy for 6-8 weeks? I would need to put the wet skins and oak in loosely (not in the muslin sack) and I have a giant funnel which should allow that. So the biggest issue might be transferring to secondary after EM, where maybe my siphon gets clogged with skins which have presumably sunk by then. But I think I have a viable Plan B if that happens, basically pour off liquid through nylon mesh bag via giant funnel, the nylon bag captures skins and oak, and I let the liquid settle again then siphon off the liquid to the secondary. Other downsides could be harder to punch down skins in carboy (so maybe I do some sloshing to keep them wet in addition to punching down as best I can), and hard to do 6 gallons plus skins in 6.5 gallon carboy (so I'd start with less water to avoid any risk of float over or foam over), and finally it is not recommended to use my Brew Belt on a glass carboy (so fermentation would be on the cooler side of BM 4X4's temperature range).
Alternatively, if EM in a narrow-mouthed glass carboy is too risky, can I do EM in a bucket without any sort of airtight lid? If so what could I do to minimize the risk of oxidation? Ferment at a colder temperature to slow fermentation down? Hold back and add some of the juice/concetrate later to extend fermentation activity? Limit punch down and stirring once terminal gravity is gravity is reached? If I do that how long could I EM after active fermentation stops?
Or should I just not attempt EM till I have a suitable wide mouthed primary with an airtight seal?
Basically, can I do a long primary with EM all in a glass 6.5 g carboy for 6-8 weeks? I would need to put the wet skins and oak in loosely (not in the muslin sack) and I have a giant funnel which should allow that. So the biggest issue might be transferring to secondary after EM, where maybe my siphon gets clogged with skins which have presumably sunk by then. But I think I have a viable Plan B if that happens, basically pour off liquid through nylon mesh bag via giant funnel, the nylon bag captures skins and oak, and I let the liquid settle again then siphon off the liquid to the secondary. Other downsides could be harder to punch down skins in carboy (so maybe I do some sloshing to keep them wet in addition to punching down as best I can), and hard to do 6 gallons plus skins in 6.5 gallon carboy (so I'd start with less water to avoid any risk of float over or foam over), and finally it is not recommended to use my Brew Belt on a glass carboy (so fermentation would be on the cooler side of BM 4X4's temperature range).
Alternatively, if EM in a narrow-mouthed glass carboy is too risky, can I do EM in a bucket without any sort of airtight lid? If so what could I do to minimize the risk of oxidation? Ferment at a colder temperature to slow fermentation down? Hold back and add some of the juice/concetrate later to extend fermentation activity? Limit punch down and stirring once terminal gravity is gravity is reached? If I do that how long could I EM after active fermentation stops?
Or should I just not attempt EM till I have a suitable wide mouthed primary with an airtight seal?