Hi All,
I made a 30L batch of cherry wine started on 09/07/20 from a mix of wild cherries, mostly black but with a few red ones as well, pits were left in but removed where possible during the fermentation. 13.2kg Cherries and 8kg sugar and 6 decaf teabags (uk ones) and Montrachet 522 yeast at about 25 degC ended up giving me 24 litres of clear wine after fermentation was complete and lees disposed of.
When fermentation was finished and I was racking off I had a taste and there was a hint of residual sweetness, I'm assuming this was due to fermentation having finished at 14% which is the limit for Montrachet. pH was taken on 19/07/20 at 3.8 with cheapo ph strips. 24ppm KMeta added on 3/10/20. At this point it tasted like cherries!
I bottled a couple of gallons on 05/02/21 to see where we were with it after 6 months and it seems to have changed quite a bit. The sweetness is gone and it so is the acidity, on my cheapo pH strips it reads at 4.4! The distinctive cherry flavour has also gone and has changed to a general fruitiness but overall it tastes much more 'winey' (apologies but no better words come to mind).
This all sounds great like a maltolactic has happened, although if you think something else please say. Problem is I still feel it has a couple of faults, it's a touch bitter, which may be due to the pits and I hope will reduce over time. It's also very dry which seems to accentuate the bitterness, obviously this can be solved via sweetening (i typically just add sucralose) but i'm hesitant to do so until it's a year old as I'd like to keep it dry if possible. The other issue is that it doesn't really taste as much like cherries anymore! While i don't expect to get this back now I'm wondering how to conserve the flavour for future attempts? More acid/different yeast like RC212 that isn't as good at reducing the maltic acid? Or more sulphide additions earlier to restrain the maltolactic?
Do you guys think it would be worthwhile trying to 'fix' the acidity at this stage, I could add some citric or tartaric to get it back to 3.8 easily enough but i'm concerned it might end up regrettable when aged some more? I did drop a couple of crystals of tartaric into a glass i was sampling and tbh i'm not sure it really improved it massively.
Finally I've only added 24ppm sulphide at this stage, and with this low acidity i'm concerned that may not be enough to protect it, would you recommend adding another 50ppm to make sure it doesn't all go down the pan?
All ideas welcome, still learning here..........
I made a 30L batch of cherry wine started on 09/07/20 from a mix of wild cherries, mostly black but with a few red ones as well, pits were left in but removed where possible during the fermentation. 13.2kg Cherries and 8kg sugar and 6 decaf teabags (uk ones) and Montrachet 522 yeast at about 25 degC ended up giving me 24 litres of clear wine after fermentation was complete and lees disposed of.
When fermentation was finished and I was racking off I had a taste and there was a hint of residual sweetness, I'm assuming this was due to fermentation having finished at 14% which is the limit for Montrachet. pH was taken on 19/07/20 at 3.8 with cheapo ph strips. 24ppm KMeta added on 3/10/20. At this point it tasted like cherries!
I bottled a couple of gallons on 05/02/21 to see where we were with it after 6 months and it seems to have changed quite a bit. The sweetness is gone and it so is the acidity, on my cheapo pH strips it reads at 4.4! The distinctive cherry flavour has also gone and has changed to a general fruitiness but overall it tastes much more 'winey' (apologies but no better words come to mind).
This all sounds great like a maltolactic has happened, although if you think something else please say. Problem is I still feel it has a couple of faults, it's a touch bitter, which may be due to the pits and I hope will reduce over time. It's also very dry which seems to accentuate the bitterness, obviously this can be solved via sweetening (i typically just add sucralose) but i'm hesitant to do so until it's a year old as I'd like to keep it dry if possible. The other issue is that it doesn't really taste as much like cherries anymore! While i don't expect to get this back now I'm wondering how to conserve the flavour for future attempts? More acid/different yeast like RC212 that isn't as good at reducing the maltic acid? Or more sulphide additions earlier to restrain the maltolactic?
Do you guys think it would be worthwhile trying to 'fix' the acidity at this stage, I could add some citric or tartaric to get it back to 3.8 easily enough but i'm concerned it might end up regrettable when aged some more? I did drop a couple of crystals of tartaric into a glass i was sampling and tbh i'm not sure it really improved it massively.
Finally I've only added 24ppm sulphide at this stage, and with this low acidity i'm concerned that may not be enough to protect it, would you recommend adding another 50ppm to make sure it doesn't all go down the pan?
All ideas welcome, still learning here..........