akron
Member
What a great thread! From the initial problem statement, to various potential solutions to the insightful question on reading the SG, then the “ahaa” moment! Good job.
Lots of reasons... Is it a full moon? Did you shower with a different brand of soap? Hahaha. Every batch from the manufacturer is different, that's why they put the batch number on the kit. There is no way to know for sure. You have the cap on the PET fermenter and an air lock. You will be fine. That setup really is more of a secondary fermenter any way. Have a good trip.I am curious why the yeast acted differently this time. The same brand of wine, same equipment, same environment.
I have started my wines in the fall all belling away, and some very slow bubbles, had to leave for a week for work, came home and everything was just fine... as long as you have a good air lock on it, don't disturb it, there will be some gas still inside protecting the wine.
That is why i love making wine.... its on my schedule... well except for the picking... i have to pick when they are ready, after that... its my schedule...@Gill . Wine seems to be forgiving, because I made other mistakes after that...
Yes, and like you discovered, after enough time it might actually make good wine!Never pour it out unless it is really spoiled. Some no-so-good wines actually make good sangria. Or cooking wine.
Never pour it out unless it is really spoiled. Some no-so-good wines actually make good sangria. Or cooking wine.
One of the best things said to me is: 'Never throw away juice, there is usually a way to save it'Never pour it out unless it is really spoiled. Some no-so-good wines actually make good sangria. Or cooking wine.
You still haven't quite got the knack of reading your hydrometer. I'm pretty sure that should be 0.992. And yes, it will be fine.My SG is 0.092.
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