DrStrangeLove
Member
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2019
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 6
I been reading other posts on this problem and I don't know if what I have here is ruined or salvageable.. so here goes. Here's the story so far.
Malbec grapes
Forgot the name of the yeast I bought from the shop
Yielded about 6 gallons (2 x 3 gallon containers)
The primary fermentation appeared to have gone well. I punched the cap twice a day and it was fermenting nicely for 7 days. I did not test the sugar levels at this time. During this time it smelled...well it smelled like wine to be honest. It was kind of a sweet wine-like smell the whole time.
After 7 days I brought the must and juice over to a friend's place and we dumped out the juice. The rest of the must went into the press and it yielded about 6 gallons altogether as i stated above. I did not separate clean juice from crushed juice. I mixed them all together.
At this point, I filled 2 containers up and plugged in the stopper with the airlock inserted and took everything home. I placed it in my basement which is forever cool. I don't have the exact temps but I would estimate at the time it was around 65-70F down there. I'm in the northeast so its probably a little cooler down there now.
In any case, I let the juice continue to ferment in this stage for a little over 3 weeks undisturbed. As you probably can guess this is where the problems begin. I went to bring my containers up from the basement to rack them. Immediately upon grabbing each one the rotten egg smell assaulted my nostrils coming out of the airlock as I applied pressure to pick up the container. I was hoping it was just trapped gasses but unfortunately, that proved to the least of the problem.
Before siphoning I notice there were still tiny bubbles coming up to the top so I assume that was still some fermentation happening. As I started siphoning, the smell was notably coming from the wine itself. The whole batch smelled pretty damn unappealing. I tasted a tiny amount from each container. One was definitely not as bad as the other but neither of them were pleasant. I did notice there was plenty of alcohol (as much as can be expected in a wine). The level of alcohol seemed to me to be more or less right or nearly so. But the wine itself, to be frank, most definitely isn't something you want to be drinking with a beautifully cooked steak, to say the least.
There was about an inch of sediment at the bottom of the containers. I did my best to siphon without grabbing anything off the bottom. That seems to have gone just fine. During this whole racking process I did notice that a few seeds, maybe 10 or so, and one half a crushed grape somehow found their way into the containers. I got all that stuff out.
I cleaned and sanitized the original containers, added sulphites, and refilled them. The method I use to add sulphite isn't by a powder but I use a smoking method. I light up a piece of a sulfur stick and let it fill the containers with a thick thick smoke at which time I refill the containers. I replaced the stopper and airlock.
So at this point, I know this has probably been asked and answered many times but I've also seen numerous different answers to solve this. Like I said this is my first go around trying to make wine. Some folks said to go buy a special copper rod and give it a good stir with that. Others say the batch is lost. Other say try some other tactics. So, what should I try first? And how do I know if it worked? Should the smell disappear immediately?
Oh and one other question.. before racking the amount of empty space in the container consisted of basically only the neck of the container. Now its about 1/2 inch below the neck of the container. Is that too much empty space? Is the amount of air in there now going to be a problem as well?
Thanks in advance! Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Malbec grapes
Forgot the name of the yeast I bought from the shop
Yielded about 6 gallons (2 x 3 gallon containers)
The primary fermentation appeared to have gone well. I punched the cap twice a day and it was fermenting nicely for 7 days. I did not test the sugar levels at this time. During this time it smelled...well it smelled like wine to be honest. It was kind of a sweet wine-like smell the whole time.
After 7 days I brought the must and juice over to a friend's place and we dumped out the juice. The rest of the must went into the press and it yielded about 6 gallons altogether as i stated above. I did not separate clean juice from crushed juice. I mixed them all together.
At this point, I filled 2 containers up and plugged in the stopper with the airlock inserted and took everything home. I placed it in my basement which is forever cool. I don't have the exact temps but I would estimate at the time it was around 65-70F down there. I'm in the northeast so its probably a little cooler down there now.
In any case, I let the juice continue to ferment in this stage for a little over 3 weeks undisturbed. As you probably can guess this is where the problems begin. I went to bring my containers up from the basement to rack them. Immediately upon grabbing each one the rotten egg smell assaulted my nostrils coming out of the airlock as I applied pressure to pick up the container. I was hoping it was just trapped gasses but unfortunately, that proved to the least of the problem.
Before siphoning I notice there were still tiny bubbles coming up to the top so I assume that was still some fermentation happening. As I started siphoning, the smell was notably coming from the wine itself. The whole batch smelled pretty damn unappealing. I tasted a tiny amount from each container. One was definitely not as bad as the other but neither of them were pleasant. I did notice there was plenty of alcohol (as much as can be expected in a wine). The level of alcohol seemed to me to be more or less right or nearly so. But the wine itself, to be frank, most definitely isn't something you want to be drinking with a beautifully cooked steak, to say the least.
There was about an inch of sediment at the bottom of the containers. I did my best to siphon without grabbing anything off the bottom. That seems to have gone just fine. During this whole racking process I did notice that a few seeds, maybe 10 or so, and one half a crushed grape somehow found their way into the containers. I got all that stuff out.
I cleaned and sanitized the original containers, added sulphites, and refilled them. The method I use to add sulphite isn't by a powder but I use a smoking method. I light up a piece of a sulfur stick and let it fill the containers with a thick thick smoke at which time I refill the containers. I replaced the stopper and airlock.
So at this point, I know this has probably been asked and answered many times but I've also seen numerous different answers to solve this. Like I said this is my first go around trying to make wine. Some folks said to go buy a special copper rod and give it a good stir with that. Others say the batch is lost. Other say try some other tactics. So, what should I try first? And how do I know if it worked? Should the smell disappear immediately?
Oh and one other question.. before racking the amount of empty space in the container consisted of basically only the neck of the container. Now its about 1/2 inch below the neck of the container. Is that too much empty space? Is the amount of air in there now going to be a problem as well?
Thanks in advance! Any help would be greatly appreciated!