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Register for newsletter at Label Peelers Wine Making and Homebrewing Equipment and Supplies bottom left hand corner.How do I get on the list.
Ahh. Seems I’m already registered.Register for newsletter at Label Peelers Wine Making and Homebrewing Equipment and Supplies bottom left hand corner.
Send them an e-mail. I was registered, but wasn't receiving the e-mails. Matt at LP corrected the issue the same day I sent them an e-mail.Ahh. Seems I’m already registered.
Nope. Punching down has been practiced for centuries, and it's fine.
Interesting, but I guess it needs a split batch test. This seems to start the same sort of religious debate as Hot Side Aeration does in the beer homebrew community. If you don't let o2 in k-meta doesn't need to react with it for removal, but can you keep o2 out end to end with wine? No cap on foam possible with wine. Also interesting is, dosing k-meta to match the o2 level, with nothing left over. Again, does it make a significant difference in wine, like it does in beer.LOL. Lack of modern sanitation was practiced for centuries -- that hardly means it's "fine."
Recent research in beer brewing shows noticeable degradation in flavors with even brief exposure to oxygen; the whole reason we "top up" wine in carboys is to minimize O2/surface contact. CO2 doesn't "push air out;" the gases mix immediately. I agree (and I stated) that with continuous and vigorous generation of CO2 early in fermentation, the O2 concentration is quickly diluted. But as fermentation proceeds, CO2 generation slows, and O2 (replenished every time you remove the lid) remains in greater concentrations, and for greater duration. This is physics; I'm not going to debate it.
I shared a tip for maximizing the contact of skins with fermenting wine, which does not require repeatedly opening the lid and allowing oxygen to contact the wine. Readers can do with that tip what they will.
Not that we don't have arguments, but this group tends to be more sedate on most matters. Sure, we disagree on many things, but few get flaming pissed, or stay pissed.Interesting, but I guess it needs a split batch test. This seems to start the same sort of religious debate as Hot Side Aeration does in the beer homebrew community. If you don't let o2 in k-meta doesn't need to react with it for removal, but can you keep o2 out end to end with wine? No cap on foam possible with wine. Also interesting is, dosing k-meta to match the o2 level, with nothing left over. Again, does it make a significant difference in wine, like it does in beer.
Not that we don't have arguments, but this group tends to be more sedate on most matters. Sure, we disagree on many things, but few get flaming pissed, or stay pissed.
Is keeping all O2 out realistic? Yeast uses O2 for reproduction, so fermenting in an open bucket produces a faster and more effective fermentation. After that? While a lot of folks use vacuum pumps, keeping all O2 out requires creating a vacuum in the destination containers at each racking, keeping the wine under vacuum during aging, and creating a vacuum in the bottle during bottles, and keeping a vacuum during corking. Inert gases could be used in some stages of the process, but it's difficult to determine how much an inert gas mixed with air during sparging a container. While possible, it seems that keeping all O2 out requires lab conditions.
An important point is that O2 is not the wine boogeyman that many believe it is. Oxidation is a factor of wine volume vs headspace volume vs time, e.g., a small volume of wine with a large headspace oxidizes more quickly than a large volume of wine with a smaller headspace. I've love to see a study of how much O2 is absorbed by a degassed wine sitting in an open bucket in 20 minutes.
Dosing SO2 to match the O2? It's an interesting idea, but outside of a lab, I have no idea if it could be accomplished.
We must consider that SO2 protects the wine from all contaminants by binding to them and rendering them harmless. It would be necessary to identify all contaminants, and add enough SO2 to address them. Winemaking has many variables we don't even know exist, much less understand.
We do a lot of things on faith -- such as adding 1/4 tsp K-meta per 5/6 US gallons at each racking and at bottling. A member conducted a test last year, and discovered that the rule of thumb results in ~30 ppm free SO2, a common target level. I searched but could not find a reference regarding where the rule came from. My guess is that it resulted from years of practical effort and was simply handed down as "the rule".
Your post is thought provoking. It also made me remember this cartoon:
View attachment 90810
Do you think Wine expert private reserve is as good as Forte FWk?Instructions for both the FWK Forte kits and Winexpert Private Reserve (which also come with skins) tell you to put the skins in a muslin bag and "punch down" the bag daily for the first ~2 weeks of fermentation. Problem: that oxidizes your wine. In the first week or so, with very vigorous fermentation, it's probably OK, as the volume of CO2 generation will quickly dilute the O2 concentration. But much after a week, opening the bucket to punch down the skins is harming the wine. There is no such thing as a "protective blanket" of CO2 -- gases mix. Even if ongoing CO2 production dilutes the concentration of O2 to, say, 50%, that's still half a headspace of O2 oxidizing the wine.
In searching for something to weight down the skin bag, I fortuitously found "fermentation weights" -- the perfect, if accidental, name! Made for keeping, e.g., cabbage submerged when making sauerkraut, these are glass weights -- easily sanitized, inert, heavy, and easy to clean. I run them through the dishwasher before and after use, and dunk in StarSan prior to adding to the skins bag. They sink the skins below the surface immediately. While I can't actually see what's happening during fermentation, when I pop the lid to rack and degas, the skins are still submerged. I'm pretty sure they stay that way throughout fermentation.
I add any oak chips to the skins in the bag(s), so they're easy to remove. I put grape seeds in a separate muslin bag, to facilitate optional separate removal after ~a week (yes, exposing the wine, but only once, and at a point of still-healthy CO2 production). I'm still not convinced that's necessary; I've lately been leaving the seeds in longer and haven't noticed any bitterness.
https://www.amazon.com/TOPZEA-Ferme...d/dp/B08SM8R3K1/ref=sr_1_5?crid=3TEJTGOCHKDS9
I just re-read the current FWK instructions for Forte and they do not say what you suggested in your very first sentence: "Instructions for both the FWK Forte kits and Winexpert Private Reserve (which also come with skins) tell you to put the skins in a muslin bag and "punch down" the bag daily for the first ~2 weeks of fermentation." Instructions are here: https://indd.adobe.com/view/6f646554-4d8c-4d2b-a253-02f3b1360b3fInstructions for both the FWK Forte kits and Winexpert Private Reserve (which also come with skins) tell you to put the skins in a muslin bag and "punch down" the bag daily for the first ~2 weeks of fermentation. Problem: that oxidizes your wine. In the first week or so, with very vigorous fermentation, it's probably OK, as the volume of CO2 generation will quickly dilute the O2 concentration. But much after a week, opening the bucket to punch down the skins is harming the wine. There is no such thing as a "protective blanket" of CO2 -- gases mix. Even if ongoing CO2 production dilutes the concentration of O2 to, say, 50%, that's still half a headspace of O2 oxidizing the wine.
In searching for something to weight down the skin bag, I fortuitously found "fermentation weights" -- the perfect, if accidental, name! Made for keeping, e.g., cabbage submerged when making sauerkraut, these are glass weights -- easily sanitized, inert, heavy, and easy to clean. I run them through the dishwasher before and after use, and dunk in StarSan prior to adding to the skins bag. They sink the skins below the surface immediately. While I can't actually see what's happening during fermentation, when I pop the lid to rack and degas, the skins are still submerged. I'm pretty sure they stay that way throughout fermentation.
I add any oak chips to the skins in the bag(s), so they're easy to remove. I put grape seeds in a separate muslin bag, to facilitate optional separate removal after ~a week (yes, exposing the wine, but only once, and at a point of still-healthy CO2 production). I'm still not convinced that's necessary; I've lately been leaving the seeds in longer and haven't noticed any bitterness.
https://www.amazon.com/TOPZEA-Ferme...d/dp/B08SM8R3K1/ref=sr_1_5?crid=3TEJTGOCHKDS9
I use stainless dry hopping tubes for my skins/stems/seeds --- Works Great!I just re-read the current FWK instructions for Forte and they do not say what you suggested in your very first sentence: "Instructions for both the FWK Forte kits and Winexpert Private Reserve (which also come with skins) tell you to put the skins in a muslin bag and "punch down" the bag daily for the first ~2 weeks of fermentation." Instructions are here: https://indd.adobe.com/view/6f646554-4d8c-4d2b-a253-02f3b1360b3f
The FWK instructions do say to punch down twice daily once fermentation starts, but they also state that the punching down stops once the SG reaches 1.010, at which point you seal the primary fermenter with an air lock and you do not open it again (so clearly no more punch downs) until day 14, when you transfer it to secondary. (See Step 3 - Fermentation steps 5 and 6 to Step 4 - Secondary Fermentation - Racking, on pages 9 and 10 of the link).
So basically FWK says you only punch down for the first few days of vigorous fermentation when lots of CO2 is produced (and when your primary is generally just covered with a cloth), then you replace the cloth with a sealed lid and airlock before it is done fermenting, before there is an oxidation risk. Basically they are suggesting a short extended maceration in that extra week or so sealed in the primary (and many of us EM for longer).
I do like the fermentation weights concept though. I have thought of that more for dry hopping beers but could be great for wine skins/oak/seeds/fruit packs too.
Yes, we are planning on doing a similar video late this year on the new Finer Wine Kits that are currently in R & D when @Matteo_Lahm travels back from Italy. I am very much looking forward to it though I might have to get another Uber ride home after drinking all of that wine. If you couldn't tell from the video, we very much enjoyed ourselves. Two Italians sitting around drinking wine together and critiquing it is a tough job. LOL.@Matteo_Lahm and @Matt_Pruszynski
I really enjoyed the year in review video from 2021. Wondering if you’ll do something similar to introduce this weekend year’s new products.
I just re-read the current FWK instructions for Forte
I'll have an answer in a few months.Do you think Wine expert private reserve is as good as Forte FWk?
I've not experienced it first hand but my understanding is that if the yeast is stressed from a lack of 02, it can cause off-flavors and smell. Maybe H2S? Not positive. Someone else can comment with more knowledge on the matter.You're right. Those instructions changed relatively recently (like within the past year -- I think when the Forte line came out with skins included?) -- they formerly said (like the Winexpert still does) to punch down daily (or more) throughout fermentation. The current instructions include an SG cut-off, but that requires taking the reading. Not only is it an added pain (sanitation & clean-up), but the wine is sitting exposed the whole while.
I just decided it's easier to submerge the skins at the outset, and leave the bucket sealed until rack/degas.
The biggest pain I've found is the fact that the 8 gal ferment bucket wants to overflow with foam. I need another gallon or two of headspace for FWKs.Not only is it an added pain (sanitation & clean-up), but the wine is sitting exposed the whole while.
Stirring or punching down has numerous purposes. Getting O2 into the must is one, as it contributes to yeast reproduction and a healthy ferment.I thought there was advantage to stirring the must two times daily to get oxygen in to help the yeast until it slows around 1.020. During that time the grape skins are getting submerged.
I have not read anything about lack of O2 causing H2S -- the papers I've read focused on lack of nutrients, and exposure to gross lees.I've not experienced it first hand but my understanding is that if the yeast is stressed from a lack of 02, it can cause off-flavors and smell. Maybe H2S? Not positive. Someone else can comment with more knowledge on the matter.
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