BernardSmith
Senior Member
Wine makers talk about cold stabilization in the context of removing tartrates from grape wines. On a different discussion board someone is arguing that cold stabilization is an effective method for removing active yeast from mead and allowing for sooner chemical stabilization of the wine because the dormant yeast drops towards the bottom of the carboy and after a couple of weeks you can rack the wine off the dormant yeast and so add stabilizers.
Now, it strikes me that wine makers typically use the amount of sugar in the fruit to determine the ABV while mead makers tend to use the alcohol level to kill the yeast and so determine the ABV that way. That means that they may feel compelled to stop the fermentation before the yeast is ready to give up the ghost.. In short : Wine makers use cold stabilization to remove tartrates from wine but mead makers use cold stabilization to remove yeast. My question - assuming that there is no residual sugar left in a wine does it make any sense to cold stabilize fruit wine to help clear it of yeast and other particulate matter? Thoughts.
Now, it strikes me that wine makers typically use the amount of sugar in the fruit to determine the ABV while mead makers tend to use the alcohol level to kill the yeast and so determine the ABV that way. That means that they may feel compelled to stop the fermentation before the yeast is ready to give up the ghost.. In short : Wine makers use cold stabilization to remove tartrates from wine but mead makers use cold stabilization to remove yeast. My question - assuming that there is no residual sugar left in a wine does it make any sense to cold stabilize fruit wine to help clear it of yeast and other particulate matter? Thoughts.