Before you do this, determine how much malic acid is present. If there's not a lot, MLF is not going to do anything.
No. You're totally wrong. Juice buckets are a completely different world. Dave's (Vinny) post made me think. Point of view matters greatly.
To me, the difference between a kit and a juice bucket is trivial. I have 40+ years of experience behind me, so it all looks alike. [to add to perspective, there at at least 3 members who have 20+ years more experience than I do.]
Kit winemaking is winemaking with training wheels. The vendor has done the detailed work and the result is a concentrate that will make a specific wine. Follow the instructions and it will produce a good result.
This is not a negative. Every winemaker is in the 1% -- we do stuff that 99% of the population can't fathom. Anyone fermenting their own wine is exceptional.
That said, stepping beyond concentrate is stepping into a new world, one without protection. You have zero protection -- you're totally on your own. There is no guarantee regarding quality, and the must and/or wine may need "fixing".
The risk involved in choosing a juice bucket over a kit is significant. But damn! It's fun!
I bought a $40 package of ML bacteria. I don't think I have anything to lose to see if it will take off. I am going to wait to see what I create before I do more buckets, and that might well be before the package expires.
You have nailed exactly what I was trying to say from my first post. Maybe better, but a totally different game all together. The owner of my LHBS told me it was the next level. Just that much better than a kit, but she had decided that in her mind before she made it. As a hobbiest I am well beyond her knowledge, which is fine, but we need to know who we are going to for 'expertise'. I just bottled a low end kit at 9 months that wasn't coming together for me, but oak and time did, and another higher end kit at 4 months is ready to bottle tomorrow. As I said, these are coming together faster, but what do I do other than change yeast?
Does changing yeast make it better? Yes! Could mine win over yours in a competition? Maybe! Does it challenge me... does it make me nervous?
No!
These juice buckets do, though. It is literally training wheels are off. 100% I can make it better than a kit... but can I? Do I have the skill to read the situation well enough? To know my preferences enough to know how to bring it around to where I want it to be?
Grapes terrify me.
In the sense of buying a huge amount and working to make the best wine you can, THE MESS! Pressing, fermenting, clearing, barrel aging? oaking?
All that effort on a batch of bad grapes? To mess it up at some point.
I ruined it?
I am finding with aging that I am starting to appreciate the country wines that I thought were mediocre, but some I have added oak, glycerin, sugar and other efforts to bring them around to where I like them.
So again, kits come balanced, and I do believe the juices are adjusted, but do you like a deep red aged on the skins? Do you like a little oak, lots of oak? MLF, back sweetening? Barrel aging? Other tweaks? Because you decide, not the kit maker.
It depends on whether these are deterrents, or does that make it challenging and thus more fun?
Do you feel lucky?
WELL...
DO YA?
No Pressure though!