smack
Member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2010
- Messages
- 72
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- 4
i am, by no means an expert. i've made about 50 gallons so far, never used a kit, but i scour this site for technique.
i am in a situation where i have far more stone crocks than i will ever have carboys. i live on a small island in the pacific and even though i have just placed a sizable order for more carboys, i will still have an overabundance of what we typically think of as primary fermenters, ranging from 30 gallons down.
i am wondering if anybody ferments and clears to bottling without the use of a carboy. i can tell from reading that quite a few of you ferment to dry, on the lees, in the primary, but then it seems that into a secondary it goes with an airlock for clearing.
i'm well aware that without a carboy, in the open top bucket type vessel that there is a lot of headspace, thus exposure to oxygen, and that the day that you finally open up the top, the CO2 barrier will be breached and the potential is introduced for oxygen to contact the wine and begin spoilage.
i'm also aware that plenty of people have made plenty of alcohol before carboys were invented, albeit nowhere near the caliber of todays home vintner.
it seems there is at least one likely candidate for possibility, skeeter pee, as it can ferment and clear so quickly, and because it needs no aging, you drink it quickly too. i probably dont need 100 gallons of skeeter pee though so. . .
my question is this: after fermented to dry, assuming that you dont use a vacuum pump, isnt the simple process of racking to another carboy, and after bulk aging, into bottles, exposing it to just as small an amount of oxygen as if you fermented, cleared, and racked to individual bottles for aging?
i wonder if anyone uses another technique to avoid the carboy.
i am in a situation where i have far more stone crocks than i will ever have carboys. i live on a small island in the pacific and even though i have just placed a sizable order for more carboys, i will still have an overabundance of what we typically think of as primary fermenters, ranging from 30 gallons down.
i am wondering if anybody ferments and clears to bottling without the use of a carboy. i can tell from reading that quite a few of you ferment to dry, on the lees, in the primary, but then it seems that into a secondary it goes with an airlock for clearing.
i'm well aware that without a carboy, in the open top bucket type vessel that there is a lot of headspace, thus exposure to oxygen, and that the day that you finally open up the top, the CO2 barrier will be breached and the potential is introduced for oxygen to contact the wine and begin spoilage.
i'm also aware that plenty of people have made plenty of alcohol before carboys were invented, albeit nowhere near the caliber of todays home vintner.
it seems there is at least one likely candidate for possibility, skeeter pee, as it can ferment and clear so quickly, and because it needs no aging, you drink it quickly too. i probably dont need 100 gallons of skeeter pee though so. . .
my question is this: after fermented to dry, assuming that you dont use a vacuum pump, isnt the simple process of racking to another carboy, and after bulk aging, into bottles, exposing it to just as small an amount of oxygen as if you fermented, cleared, and racked to individual bottles for aging?
i wonder if anyone uses another technique to avoid the carboy.