P.S.- if you're willing to share, I'd still be interested in hearing more details of your white treatment, Spaniel. I just about finished two batches of alcoholic fermentation of Riesling, and used separate yeast strains, hoping to produce different responses from the same vineyard grapes. I had quite a bit of sediment, as well. I let one carboy settle before racking, and the other I left a bit cloudy. The first should be a clean and fresh Riesling, while the other will produce an earthy, rich wine.
-Pick
-Crush
-Load in press, collect free run and set aside
-Press, collect in second container
-Optionally, after gunk has settled a bit, scoop clearer juice and separate that again as a separate batch
-Add sulfate and get juice in glass
-Put at 60F for ~24hrs
-Take Brix, rack onto sugar + yeast energizer
-Record pH/TA but where I live I've yet to ADD acid
-Pitch yeast
-Maintain fermentation as close to 55-60F range as possible
-Ferment to dry (~2-3 weeks)
-Rack after max clearing reached
-Cold stabilize ~1 month
-Bentonite if necessary (it typically takes some)
-Check pH/TA; last year was first with this equipment and no adjustments were necessary
-Rack, add sorbate
- ~48hrs later back-sweeten to taste
-Let sit until I feel like bottling, rack of any fine sediment (very little by then)
Last year I used my ancient kegerator for cooling, it is finicky but I can get it to stick in the 60-65F range. This year due to much higher yield I bought a used fridge off Craigslist for $50. Given record temps I am glad I did but it is impossible to get it to stay in range. I check it twice a day, it has ranged as high as 72F and as low as 45F. Last night it was 96F out, so as fermentation was still going at 45F I just left it as if I was not careful I would end up at 80F before I could check it again! Next year I'm getting a temp controller as discussed on here.
To JohnT's point about whole cluster being crisper, I do not doubt it. It is just not something I can do with my equipment.
As a biochemist I am prone to experiment. Last year I was really rushed with my harvest/crush. I saved the free run, then pressed and saved that. I realized that I'd crushed so fast and it was after dark and I'd missed a lot of grapes. So I re-crushed and pressed again for another smaller batch! Everything else was kept EXACTLY the same; at the end, chemistry was identical (pH/TA/SG). I send in the pressed and got a bronze with that. The twice pressed was perfectly drinkable but not something I would enter in a contest or give away. The free run was crisper and I likely would have gotten one medal higher with that, as that was the weakness of the pressed batch in judging.
IMHO the "light crush" I did last year where I missed a lot...and doing it with feet...was probably a rough corollary to whole bunch pressing. This year I did a better job crushing and took my time and the ratio of free run
ressed juice went from 50:50 to 80:20.