GreenEnvy22
Senior Member
Hi all,
I have a wine I am making for a relative. I make this most years for them, but it's always a rushed affair because we harvest in late September, and it needs to be ready for Christmas. I have no control over the timeline. I know time is the best option, and stopping fermentation isn't easy or the best method. But I don't have the time.
It's a rose (Dornfelder pressed immediately, ferments without skins), and they want it super sweet, like 1.016-1.020 at bottling).
Usually, i reserve some juice and freeze, then backsweeten after it ferments dry. We've had some issues with cloudyness/sediment, even though it's looked clear at bottling. I have run it through a 1 micron (whole house style) filter with my AIO, each time, after a few rackings, but still cloudyness appears later. I think it might be coming from the frozen sweet juice (though that was mixed in during the final filtering). I do sorbate and get my sulfites in the normal range, and we don't usually have any issue with refermentation, just cloudyness/sediment.
This year we want to try it differently. I have a spare chest freezer I had setup as a beer keezer, but is now sitting empty. So I can control temperature very well.
I can fit in a 20 gallon brute and a 7 gallon fermenting pail, which is about the volume we'd have for this.
The thought is to ferment until we approach that desired SG, then set the keezer to go down to 34-36 F, do some bentonite/chitosan/sparkloid or similar, and let it sit like that for a few weeks. Then we'd rack it out, and run through a 1 micron, then 0.35 micron filter. Then sorbate and get sulfites to around 40ppm for bottling.
Thoughts on this?
I have a wine I am making for a relative. I make this most years for them, but it's always a rushed affair because we harvest in late September, and it needs to be ready for Christmas. I have no control over the timeline. I know time is the best option, and stopping fermentation isn't easy or the best method. But I don't have the time.
It's a rose (Dornfelder pressed immediately, ferments without skins), and they want it super sweet, like 1.016-1.020 at bottling).
Usually, i reserve some juice and freeze, then backsweeten after it ferments dry. We've had some issues with cloudyness/sediment, even though it's looked clear at bottling. I have run it through a 1 micron (whole house style) filter with my AIO, each time, after a few rackings, but still cloudyness appears later. I think it might be coming from the frozen sweet juice (though that was mixed in during the final filtering). I do sorbate and get my sulfites in the normal range, and we don't usually have any issue with refermentation, just cloudyness/sediment.
This year we want to try it differently. I have a spare chest freezer I had setup as a beer keezer, but is now sitting empty. So I can control temperature very well.
I can fit in a 20 gallon brute and a 7 gallon fermenting pail, which is about the volume we'd have for this.
The thought is to ferment until we approach that desired SG, then set the keezer to go down to 34-36 F, do some bentonite/chitosan/sparkloid or similar, and let it sit like that for a few weeks. Then we'd rack it out, and run through a 1 micron, then 0.35 micron filter. Then sorbate and get sulfites to around 40ppm for bottling.
Thoughts on this?