Flugel91_30
Funditor
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 0
Hello. As a preface to this, I'm new to both this forum and wine-making. I made 3 gallons of dandelion wine last year, but aside from that this is my first year making wine, and definitely my first year doing so relatively seriously. Anyway...
I'm working on a cherry wine right now, and have a few questions. I followed the recipe on Jack Keller's website for Morello (tart) cherries, using freshly picked cherries from a few trees nearby. I adjusted his recipe for five gallons of wine, and proceeded from there. However, after letting my must cool, I discovered that the 12.5 lbs of sugar the recipe calls for is FAR too much. My must had a SG of 1.130... I diluted it down to 1.110 (15% abv, 29 balling/brix, I believe).
So my first question is... if I am using Red Star Pasteur Red yeast, should fermentation proceed alright from here? I'm worried that the sugar concentration may be too much for the yeast to handle. I ran a Strawberry wine earlier, that is now aging/settling, that started with an initial SG of 1.112, and it fermented pretty well (11-12% abv upon transferring to secondary). Needless to say, I'll be checking the SG of my fruit juice before adding any sugar...
My second question is... how much will it hurt the action of my pectic enzyme to have added it and the yeast to the must at the same time? I was unaware of the need to let the enzyme work before adding the yeast (although I did this with my strawberry wine, but this was just following the recipe. I didn't know why I was doing this. Now, however, I know). I used 6 lbs of cherries per gallon (30 lbs total for 5 gallons of wine), so I'll still have a good bit of juice even without the pectic enzyme. Further, my grandfather kept an eye on the must as we brought it to a boil, and let it boil intermittently over a 1.5-2 hour period, so the cherries should be fairly thoroughly juiced. I still worry, however, about getting all the juice out and having a potential pectin haze.
Finally... does the amount of pectic enzyme added really matter? I scaled most aspects of Jack Keller's recipe up by 5, including the pectic enzyme. So I added 5 tsp of pectic enzyme, which seemed like quite a bit to me. I added 3 tsp, I believe, to my Strawberry wine, and I can assure you that the berries were thoroughly broken down. In fact, they were destroyed to such an extent that it took me about 2 hours to strain it into secondary, due to clogs (I don't rack into secondary to avoid loosing yeast in the lees, although I worry that adding in the appropriate campden tablets, 1 tablet/gallon, may have hindered or killed the yeast).
So... I'll stop there for now. I suppose I'll see in a few days whether the yeast is working or not, but I dont' want to risk loosing this must. It took me about 2-3 hrs to pick those cherries, and they've produced an excellent, and I mean excellent must. The liquid is dark red, even in a tasting spoon, and the cherry flavor is strong.
I'm working on a cherry wine right now, and have a few questions. I followed the recipe on Jack Keller's website for Morello (tart) cherries, using freshly picked cherries from a few trees nearby. I adjusted his recipe for five gallons of wine, and proceeded from there. However, after letting my must cool, I discovered that the 12.5 lbs of sugar the recipe calls for is FAR too much. My must had a SG of 1.130... I diluted it down to 1.110 (15% abv, 29 balling/brix, I believe).
So my first question is... if I am using Red Star Pasteur Red yeast, should fermentation proceed alright from here? I'm worried that the sugar concentration may be too much for the yeast to handle. I ran a Strawberry wine earlier, that is now aging/settling, that started with an initial SG of 1.112, and it fermented pretty well (11-12% abv upon transferring to secondary). Needless to say, I'll be checking the SG of my fruit juice before adding any sugar...
My second question is... how much will it hurt the action of my pectic enzyme to have added it and the yeast to the must at the same time? I was unaware of the need to let the enzyme work before adding the yeast (although I did this with my strawberry wine, but this was just following the recipe. I didn't know why I was doing this. Now, however, I know). I used 6 lbs of cherries per gallon (30 lbs total for 5 gallons of wine), so I'll still have a good bit of juice even without the pectic enzyme. Further, my grandfather kept an eye on the must as we brought it to a boil, and let it boil intermittently over a 1.5-2 hour period, so the cherries should be fairly thoroughly juiced. I still worry, however, about getting all the juice out and having a potential pectin haze.
Finally... does the amount of pectic enzyme added really matter? I scaled most aspects of Jack Keller's recipe up by 5, including the pectic enzyme. So I added 5 tsp of pectic enzyme, which seemed like quite a bit to me. I added 3 tsp, I believe, to my Strawberry wine, and I can assure you that the berries were thoroughly broken down. In fact, they were destroyed to such an extent that it took me about 2 hours to strain it into secondary, due to clogs (I don't rack into secondary to avoid loosing yeast in the lees, although I worry that adding in the appropriate campden tablets, 1 tablet/gallon, may have hindered or killed the yeast).
So... I'll stop there for now. I suppose I'll see in a few days whether the yeast is working or not, but I dont' want to risk loosing this must. It took me about 2-3 hrs to pick those cherries, and they've produced an excellent, and I mean excellent must. The liquid is dark red, even in a tasting spoon, and the cherry flavor is strong.