LOL 89.6 - 95 FWay to complex for me,numbers after alphabets.
To old .
I’m tempted to order a chard and sauv Blanc... But if I keep buying these finer wine kits, I’m not going to have money for fresh grapes this fall.
Um, excuse me!
Is there a negative interaction between bentonite and sorbate?I am not going to use the Sorbate, partly because I'm using bentonite and partly because I don't plan to back-sweeten.
I'm curious about the beginning SG numbers. I got 1.095 from my Sangiovese kit before I added the skins. I pitched the yeast 24hrs after adding skins but did not take another SG before pitching. Are others taking two readings? Getting any increase from the skins? I usually get an increase in SG from the typical skins packs from WE and RJS but these are difference. I tasted one from the Finer Wines kit before adding to the must. I detected no sweetness by tasting. I did bite into it and got a bitter taste from the seed.Beginning SG was 1.100 on the nose.
I'm curious about the beginning SG numbers. I got 1.095 from my Sangiovese kit before I added the skins. I pitched the yeast 24hrs after adding skins but did not take another SG before pitching. Are others taking two readings? Getting any increase from the skins? I usually get an increase in SG from the typical skins packs from WE and RJS but these are difference. I tasted one from the Finer Wines kit before adding to the must. I detected no sweetness by tasting. I did bite into it and got a bitter taste from the seed.
Is there a negative interaction between bentonite and sorbate?
I did not take a reading after adding the skins. I racked both of my kits today. SG for both .994 6 days after pitching the yeast!I'm curious about the beginning SG numbers. I got 1.095 from my Sangiovese kit before I added the skins. I pitched the yeast 24hrs after adding skins but did not take another SG before pitching. Are others taking two readings?
Not exactly on topic, but still related to economics, I just read an article on US grape statistics. 2019 figures, but enlightening.Hi @mainshipfred hope you're well!
Making red wine all year is a valid advantage, like you say. These are also great options for folks who don't have all the equipment and testing for grapes, don't have access to fresh local grapes or juice.
These new Finer Wine 6-gallon red kits have yeast, yeast starter, oak, nutrients, all chems, non-pasteurized juice, and two ginormous fresh skin packs, shipped cold to me for $114, including shipping. Everything is engineered to go together, everything is pH-balanced, and the instructions are 10 pages. That would be roughly $20 per gallon for a brand new type of kit without kit taste.
For me to do red in the off-season it would be working with 5 gallons of frozen must, like from Wine Grapes Direct and theirs are $225 including shipping, not necessarily balanced, need chems, need $20 MLF bacteria, need yeast, I press by hand, etc. So that would be roughly $59 a gallon.
Juice + All-grape pack would work, too. Walkers has 5 gallon cab juice shipped to me for $132. The grape pack shipped to me is $44. Need chems, need MLB $20, need yeast. So that's $196 for 5 gallons, or $39/gallon.
Walker's chardonnay is 5 gallons shipped to me for $119. So $23.60 per gallon.
The fresh stuff picked up locally in Spring and Fall is really the way to go. That gets your bucket into the $65 range and the lugs in the $40 range for 6 gallons. not necessarily balanced, need chems, need $20 MLF bacteria, need yeast. That's $125 or $21/gallon.
Finer added some6-gallon whites recently. Their whites again include all chems and are balanced, shipped to me for $86. That's $14/gallon.
I would normally do whites as fresh juice that I pick up locally for about $65 + chems. That's $11/gallon.
Food for thought, anyway.
I ended up doing my starters in tall pint tumblers with a paper towel on the top and didn't have an issue with foaming over.I got my pull tab to open, using the arrow even!
Then I promptly spilled a tablespoon or two of super-concentrated extract, damn, I've poured 18 liters with less of a mess. Still wound up at 1.098 after a good stirring. I tasted the skins and they had flavor but almost no sugar so I don't expect much of any gravity boost from the double pack (but I will get a bit of a boost from the 12 oz. of dried raisins and apricots I added, see below). I liked that the skins did not include seeds like the RJS EP sweet and jammy skins do.
Yeast starter from last night wanted to foam over but did not breach the fabric which covered it (as it was rubber banded in place).
Besides using BM4X4 yeast and not starting the must till just before yeast pitch I also added 8 oz. + 4 oz. of organic non-sulfured raisins + apricots (since I did the same with the RJS EP Super Tuscan which I'm trying to compare to). As I racked then squeezed then emptied the jammy skin plus raisin/aprictot muslin sacks from the RJS batch, I tasted an apricot and a raisin (which were in for 25 days) and they had both given up their sweetness to the yeast / wine.
I ended up doing my starters in tall pint tumblers with a paper towel on the top and didn't have an issue with foaming over.
I took an SG reading before adding a double pack of skins and 4 days later (cold soaked) before I pitched the yeast starter. SG was 1.100 both times. Not that that's a bad thing.I'm curious about the beginning SG numbers. I got 1.095 from my Sangiovese kit before I added the skins. I pitched the yeast 24hrs after adding skins but did not take another SG before pitching. Are others taking two readings? Getting any increase from the skins? I usually get an increase in SG from the typical skins packs from WE and RJS but these are difference. I tasted one from the Finer Wines kit before adding to the must. I detected no sweetness by tasting. I did bite into it and got a bitter taste from the seed.
Don't sweat the head space as long as you have active fermentation. This is no different from being in the primary.There’s more headspace than I would like, but when the bags of Skins rise, it will give then room for now.
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