Hi, folks. Forgive my ignorance. This is my first attempt (at wine, that is). It's from a kit--WineExpert Selection International Italian Montepulciano. I thought I'd gotten all the co2 out of the wine at bottling (goodness knows, I beat the bejeezus out of it with the drill and degassing wand while fining), but on bottling day I'd been drinking beer, so maybe I just didn't notice the residual co2 when sampling the wine. After 6 weeks in the bottle, my wife and I decided to pop one to see how it was coming along, and there was noticeable co2 in there. The question is--what to do at this point. I figure I could:
1. Leave it all alone and degas with a VacuVin thingy whenever I open a bottle in the future (unless this will cause problems with flavor along the way for some reason that I'm not aware of).
2. Open everything at this point and degas in the bottle with a VacuVin thingy (or maybe the Mity-Vac brake bleeding system that I use on my cars--I've read up on how to rig it up, and I'll certainly use it on the carboy in the future). Then just re-cork.
3. Open every bottle, pour into a carboy and bulk degas. But this would seem to risk introducing a lot of o2 into the wine.
What's my best course of action? I'd prefer no. 1, if it isn't going to lead to any major issues. Many thx!
1. Leave it all alone and degas with a VacuVin thingy whenever I open a bottle in the future (unless this will cause problems with flavor along the way for some reason that I'm not aware of).
2. Open everything at this point and degas in the bottle with a VacuVin thingy (or maybe the Mity-Vac brake bleeding system that I use on my cars--I've read up on how to rig it up, and I'll certainly use it on the carboy in the future). Then just re-cork.
3. Open every bottle, pour into a carboy and bulk degas. But this would seem to risk introducing a lot of o2 into the wine.
What's my best course of action? I'd prefer no. 1, if it isn't going to lead to any major issues. Many thx!