I used sorbate, but...Sounds like you didn't use sorbate first. And now you have renewed ferment.
I don't think so? I'm pretty sure I used the new and tossed the old. Something to check when I get home. If the new is unopened then we have an answer.Was your sorbate old?
I was was wondering what the reason was.Good example of why we wait to bottle after back sweetening.
What was the SG after backsweetening, and what is it now? If they are the same, it's not fermentation.I don't think so? I'm pretty sure I used the new and tossed the old. Something to check when I get home. If the new is unopened then we have an answer.
That's a good question. I'll check that tonight also. If it's not fermentation, then what might it be?What was the SG after backsweetening, and what is it now? If they are the same, it's not fermentation.
It just occurred to me that I didn't take a reading after I backsweetened, I just did it to taste. But it turns out that I used the old sorbate, the new one is unopened. The old one is about 7 years old. I guess that means that, in effect, I added no sorbate. How do I proceed from here?What was the SG after backsweetening, and what is it now? If they are the same, it's not fermentation
Hopefully just excess CO2.That's a good question. I'll check that tonight also. If it's not fermentation, then what might it be?
On the plus side, you have learned to ALWAYS take a SG reading.It just occurred to me that I didn't take a reading after I backsweetened, I just did it to taste. But it turns out that I used the old sorbate, the new one is unopened. The old one is about 7 years old. I guess that means that, in effect, I added no sorbate. How do I proceed from here?
Well, there could be worse flavors than bubble gum I suppose. I did ad KMeta.To much sorbate can lead to a bubble gum type of flavor, from what I understand.
You didn't say, so did you also add KMeta along with the Potassium Sorbate, it really takes both to be effective.
Essentially zero. Treat it as a racking and add k-meta. Avoid splashing too much while unbottling.The question I have before I do that is, what are the chances of oxidation from pouring the bottles back into a carboy and mixing the two batches?
That's a good question. I figure dilution into my plans, as it can be significant, e.g., backsweetening 6 US gallons of Apple with 3 quarts apple juice reduces a 12% ABV wine to 10.7%. Diluting that wine with 6 quarts drops the ABV to 9.6%.Noobie questions. If you ferment your DB to 9.5% - 10% alcohol then add, say 2 lbs/gal of fruit in the secondary, are you not diluting your ABV by nearly 20-25%?
Even supposing the fruit sg is 1.040 and fermentation starts again (does it do this?) and goes to completion won't it still decrease the ABV some, is this significant?
should you plan an little higher ABV to start with to compensate if you plan on adding fruit to the secondary?
Why? Why not ferment dry, then back-sweeten? Easy peasy.
Plan for 12-14%
DB 12%
If you add fruit, you're adding sugar, thus higher ABV
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