It needs a couple of months to fully integrate. I always add it after final racking and top up so it gets at least 6 months in the carboy to integrate. I have added a dose to a few bottles and let it sit for a week and it was still markedly improved over what it was. I am sitting on some CC Showcase (big) reds that are 18+ months now (that had tannin added up front before bottling) and they are by far the best wines I have made to date (kit wise).
I added two grams of Tancor Grand Cru to half of my Red Mountain Cab that is bulk aging. I also added medium french oak cubes. I compared the two last night and really like what the tannin has done for the wine. I am thinking I will probally do the same to the other half of the batch. Thanks for the tip, Mike.Tannin is a personal thing. I happen to like big (massive) chewy reds and was always disappointed with my high end red kits (even with my Red Mountain Cab) until I started toying with post fermentation tannins. It was like viola' thats whats been missing all along (along with barrel aging of course). So yes, I am adding a dose of Tancor Grand Cru to all my reds.
Some a little more, some a little less depending on varietal. I added some to my CC Rosso Fortissimo after it was bottled. Its now one of my all time favorite wines as well. It will lengthen the finish dramatically. I highly recommend it if you are a little underwhelmed with the finish of your bold red kits.
The take home here is the LR Kits really do turn out a much higher quality wine. They are easily worth any extra cost.
Sounds good. I am thinking I may go up to 6 gm equivalent on 23L and see what that is like (on just a bottle of something at first) That is close to the recommended max of 7 gm per 23L.
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