Degassing was (AFAIK) introduced by kit vendors to clear the wine faster to enable 4 to 8 week bottling timeframes. Degassing is not necessary, as the wine will degas with time.Can you completely Degas a wine through fermentation and get a somewhat successful wine without the use of a degassing machine?
OTOH, I practice degassing to clear the wine faster, since CO2 holds particles in suspension. After fermentation is 100% complete, I use a drill-mounted stirring rod. The typical kit instructions are to stir for 30 seconds, then change directions 5 times, for a total of 3 minutes of stirring. You are NOT going to completely degas the wine doing this -- it jump starts the process to it completes quicker.
I stir for 20-30 seconds in each direction, changing direction 3 to 5 times. Since I do not bottle on kit schedule, my experience is that even a single stirring of 1 total minute is sufficient to jump start the process. With the CO2 mostly gone, the gross lees drops faster and can be removed sooner.
You can use a spoon or paddle to stir, but once you use a drill-mounted stirring rod, you won't want to use anything else. It is the best tool for mixing kits (or any must) and degasses the quickest.
Must should be stirred at least once daily during active fermentation. If you have fruit solids, the cap needs to be punched down at least once per day to keep it moist. If the must is just juice, stirring is still good. I try to stir morning and night.On the subject of fermentation, is is a normal thing to stir the wine each day during fermentation?
The fermentation process extracts constituents from the fruit solids. Especially with red grapes, long term exposure (full duration of the ferment) enables more extraction. For most wines, I'd leave the fruit in until the SG hits 1.000.I have put my fruit in a cloth bag to add to the primary during fermentation. Is it common to leave the fruit in suspension then strain later?
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