what is your desired goal? a sweet wine?
cranberry wine. . Do you think I should rack it to slow it down a little bit?
* Yeast die off/ have metabolism problems below pH 2.8, in a normal fruit fermentation CO
2 is produced which pushes the pH down from three something to three. You started with a low pH since you have cranberry (juice examples; 2018 pH 2.52/ 2019 pH 2.69/ store juice pH 2.70)
* Yeast do not live in high sugar (osmotic pressure) solutions. You are pushing the limit with a gravity of 1.124,,,
* Yeast do not live in high alcohol generally 18% for 1118 BUT this is like building another fence on top of the fences of pH and osmotic pressure.
* At this point you could treat with metabisulphite (add another fence) and completely kill off the yeast.
* Racking is another fence but a weaker one, it pulls nutrients out of the wine which yeast need at the same time as adding oxygen, which the yeast need.
Folks in the vinters club who run 100% cranberry juice and want it to go dry pull some of the acid out with calcium carbonate, ,,,,, removing one of the fences that kill off yeast.
Again what is your goal? ,,, The TA on the 100% juice examples above were 3.16% / 3.26% / 2.80%. For a balanced wine with a TA four times normal you may wind up back sweetening to 1.060. ,,,, If the goal is dry you need to remove lots of acid either by dilution or adding a carbonate.
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