Zintrigue
Senior Member
You, sir, are a gentleman and a scholar. Thank you.
Trouble Clearing several batches of wine.. Mostly the Dragon Blood Recipe..
Been a while since I have been on here..
This is one of my favorite recipes.. I have made it a bunch of times.. It is usually a very fast clearing wine..
This time, it is clearing super, super slow..
I have thought about it several times while waiting.. I can't think of anything I did different..
If I did, I went back and corrected it and tried it again..
Only main difference.. I tried a much finer powdered bentonite clay this time, thinking it would hydrate better than the more granular version I put in a blender and run for 5 minutes and then seep/boil for 15 or 20 minutes, but, I have even gone back and used the original Bentonite and did the blending and seeping and I still am looking at a very, very slow clearing wine..
The only other thing I didn't do is stir it daily, like I usually do, so I can't go back and fix that.. But, I am sure I have made a batch without stirring like I should have before.. At least didn't stir it like I should have.. This batch, I didn't stir at all.. Just started it and finished it...
I am the crazy guy who kills the yeast at the end of Primary(Potassium Sorbate and Metabisulfite), stirs, then pulls a vacuum on his brews to degass,then adds the Bentonite, stirs, and usually the wine clears over night with the bentonite clay mix... I may have one more subsequent racking maybe a week later to keep from having the dust in the bottom of the bottles.. Never any heavy settlements..
I make a 12 or 15 gallon batch every year and have never seen it not clear, or this slow clearing before..
Anyone have any ideas to clear it quickly??
I have 2-6 gallon batches and 1-5 gallon and 2-1gallon batches..
I did one "Full Body=6lbs fruit, two with 3lbs fruit=light wine, and the others were different frozen fruit juice mixes I was trying (New Recipes)..
All but one are having the same problem..
The second run, using the older more granular bentonite cleared the other gallon over night, but, not like it usually clears.. 2 Weeks after the second application of bentonite clay, and it just now looks ready to bottle.. Usually, it is overnight..
I had a real hard time with a bananna wine one time.. Thought it would never clear.. Read somewhere to use an extract of boiled "Old Bananas", and it worked like a charm.. But, I figured it was for Bananna wines??
Ready to try anything to see what works.. Not worried about changing the flavor, etc at this point..
Any ideas are very welcome.. I promised 5 gallons of this to a friend for a wedding party... It's making me a bit nervous.. Ha..
Started my wine making journey just this past weekend. Found a bunch of my father in-law's wine equipment so I decided to start up a new hobby. First thing I did was buy a riesling and get that set up (to appease my wife with my new hobby). About 3 days after that started fermenting I came across this recipe for Dragon Blood Wine. So what do I do? Immediately go out to the store to purchase all the ingredients necessary.
As mentioned I am a complete newbie when it comes to wine..I have a total of 1 week's experience and about 20 hrs of online "research" aka videos and forums.
Day 1 (Sunday) - created the must as per directions and let sit.
- SG 1.065 prior to adding berries
Day 2 (Monday Afternoon) - squeezed berries/pitched yeast/big stir
- SG 1.072
Day 3 (Tuesday Afternoon) - squeezed/stir
- SG 1.072
So at this point I start wondering what the hell is going on with my yeast..why hasn't it started fermenting? I read through numerous posts and I figure it has to be the temp. I currently don't have a reliable digital reader so I decided that is first thing on my shopping list for Wednesday (today).
I live in near Toronto and our temps are starting to drop...my house is typically 73 degrees so I decided to warm things up a bit and aid my must with bringing it closer to my furnace, wrapped in blankets etc..
Day 4 (Wednesday Morning) -
I practically jump out of bed this morning to check on things and BOOM! She has started and the fermentation is on its way.... It took roughly 36 hours for things to get going...it was a very long 36 hours. Didn't take a reading this morning because I was in a rush for work.
Moral of story - measure temp, if you live in Canada a heating belt might be a great investment. Looking forward to my first batch.
\Or you can buy a cheap aquarium heater and use that,,,,,
That was really a pain. It happens in every bottle of my fruit wine using sparkoloid as clarifier. I suspect sparkoloid is the trouble maker. I am still struggling to figure it out how to deal with it. I am trying a couple of 1 gal batches with bentonite/sparkoloid combination and Chitosan respectively to see which works. Maybe Superkleer is a good solution but I don't have it.Does anyone have experience with an aged DB producing some kind of fluffy sediment? I racked off the final lees, then let it sit for 3 long months. Didn't see any more sediment come down, so then I bottled. Now there's this fluffy stuff in the bottles. I'm peeved, to say the least, and would love to explore why this is happening so that I can put a stop to it. Flavor isn't affected.
Agree. Superkleer consists of two part, negatively charged part helps to remove protein and the positively charged part helps to clean up the rest. Just like some clarifier comes with the kits.SuperKleer is your answer. It packs the lees much tighter. That is one of the downfalls of Sparklloid, the "whispies" that appear later in the bottle.
I use 1 1/2 pounds of fruit per gallon for all my batches.Hello everyone.
I'm new to the forum, but I'm already into my second 3 gallon batch of Dragon's Blood Wine - and planning a 3rd.
For my third I'm planning all strawberry fruit. Instead of 1 lb of frozen fruit per gallon, I was thinking I should do more - at least 4 lbs for a 3 gallon batch. Or 5 lbs?
Any thoughts or pointers?
Thanks.
I'd follow the yeast packet directions, but it probably wouldn't really make any difference.Hi guys! New member hear and also just started my very first batch of this wine(3 gallon half batch). I am about to pitch my yeast and I noticed that in the recipe it says use manufactures directions but also use 1 cup of 100 degree water. While my packet of ec-1118 yeast says to use only 2 oz? What would be best since im only doing a 3 gallon batch?
The difference it can make is that you can identify the dead yeast and save a few frustrating days to wait and wait for a fermentation that never starts.I'd follow the yeast packet directions, but it probably wouldn't really make any difference.
I was saying that it probably didn't matter if he re-hydrated the yeast using a cup of water, per the recipe, or with 2 oz of water per the yeast packet directions.The difference it can make is that you can identify the dead yeast and save a few frustrating days to wait and wait for a fermentation that never starts.
I experienced once and from then on i always rehydrate the yeast.
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