Paulie vino
Senior Member
Hey guys, this is my first year making some with grapes. In the past few years, I made 3 batches of juice buckets which were just ok. I was gifted a wine press and now am looking to do better with real grapes.
I was hoping to get them a few weeks ago but due a vacation I had planned, I couldn't start any sooner. I picked up 3 lugs of cab franc this past Monday. They seemed to be a little past their prime, a little squishy to the touch and some mold in one case, with some raisins scattered throughout. The grapes were delivered so I was not able to examine the lugs prior to purchasing. I'm assuming this is what happens when they travel from the west coast to east coast and then sat around for a while probably. Anyway, I sorted them and got rid of much moldy ones as possible. I was a little less strict with the raisins with a lot of them going in (not sure how that will effect the whole process).
After crushing, I hand picked most of the stems and was left witb what looked like around 11 gallons (how do you guys properly measure the amount of must volume in your fermenters? Do you eyeball or have markings in the side?). I measured the brix to be 27.3 and the SG to be 1.117, which gave me some cause for concern. I checked again to make sure and my numbers were right. I even checked the next morning prior to yeast pitching and the numbers were the same. I don't have any tools to measure the acid but I would assume since it was such a high brix the acid would be low, but I have no way to know. I thought about watering down but don't have any tartaric acid. What would you guys have done in this case? based on those numbers it's on track to be around 15 or 16 %
Next, I took out a digital kitchen scale to measure the appropriate amount for SO2 and quickly realized the scale would not read such little amounts of grams, so I did the best I could. I bought a new scale which just arrived today do fix this problem. Anyway, I also added lallzyme ex at the same time. I only had 8g which was less than the dosage needed for this volume but since it was all I had I used it.
The next morning I threw in some ft rouge tannin and rehydrated d254 yeast with go ferm. I had 2 8g packs and instead of trying to weight out exact amounts I used both for a total of 16g. I figured since the must was high brix I'd rather be safe than sorry. The yeast rehydrated well and I pitched it in yesterday morning. By yesterday night a very light cap had started to form so I gave it a punch down. By this morning the cap was back and fermentation appeared to be going so I added a first dose of Fermaid o to keep the yeast happy. I should mention that in my experience and rush to go to work I threw in the powder without mixing it in water first. I realized my error as it started to clump up in the must so I didy best to mix it in. I will plan on adding another dose at 1/3 sugar depletion (18 brix).
The temperature of the must at pitch was around 58 degrees since it's been a little cold in my attached garage here in NY. It's now up in the low to mid 60s in the garage now which should be a good enough environment to ferment.
So far it's been fun but I am worried about the high brix and getting a stuck fermentation. The yeast can handle up to 16% so I'm hoping it doesn't pass that.
If you guys have any tips or suggestions to my process so far I would much appreciate it. This forum is a gold mine of information.
The post wouldn't be complete without some pics, so here they are
I was hoping to get them a few weeks ago but due a vacation I had planned, I couldn't start any sooner. I picked up 3 lugs of cab franc this past Monday. They seemed to be a little past their prime, a little squishy to the touch and some mold in one case, with some raisins scattered throughout. The grapes were delivered so I was not able to examine the lugs prior to purchasing. I'm assuming this is what happens when they travel from the west coast to east coast and then sat around for a while probably. Anyway, I sorted them and got rid of much moldy ones as possible. I was a little less strict with the raisins with a lot of them going in (not sure how that will effect the whole process).
After crushing, I hand picked most of the stems and was left witb what looked like around 11 gallons (how do you guys properly measure the amount of must volume in your fermenters? Do you eyeball or have markings in the side?). I measured the brix to be 27.3 and the SG to be 1.117, which gave me some cause for concern. I checked again to make sure and my numbers were right. I even checked the next morning prior to yeast pitching and the numbers were the same. I don't have any tools to measure the acid but I would assume since it was such a high brix the acid would be low, but I have no way to know. I thought about watering down but don't have any tartaric acid. What would you guys have done in this case? based on those numbers it's on track to be around 15 or 16 %
Next, I took out a digital kitchen scale to measure the appropriate amount for SO2 and quickly realized the scale would not read such little amounts of grams, so I did the best I could. I bought a new scale which just arrived today do fix this problem. Anyway, I also added lallzyme ex at the same time. I only had 8g which was less than the dosage needed for this volume but since it was all I had I used it.
The next morning I threw in some ft rouge tannin and rehydrated d254 yeast with go ferm. I had 2 8g packs and instead of trying to weight out exact amounts I used both for a total of 16g. I figured since the must was high brix I'd rather be safe than sorry. The yeast rehydrated well and I pitched it in yesterday morning. By yesterday night a very light cap had started to form so I gave it a punch down. By this morning the cap was back and fermentation appeared to be going so I added a first dose of Fermaid o to keep the yeast happy. I should mention that in my experience and rush to go to work I threw in the powder without mixing it in water first. I realized my error as it started to clump up in the must so I didy best to mix it in. I will plan on adding another dose at 1/3 sugar depletion (18 brix).
The temperature of the must at pitch was around 58 degrees since it's been a little cold in my attached garage here in NY. It's now up in the low to mid 60s in the garage now which should be a good enough environment to ferment.
So far it's been fun but I am worried about the high brix and getting a stuck fermentation. The yeast can handle up to 16% so I'm hoping it doesn't pass that.
If you guys have any tips or suggestions to my process so far I would much appreciate it. This forum is a gold mine of information.
The post wouldn't be complete without some pics, so here they are
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