dking193
4th year at this!
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2014
- Messages
- 59
- Reaction score
- 33
Tonight was my first attempt at watermelon wine. For reference I used two recipes. One from Jack Keller that he got from Norma Jean and Carole Darden's Spoonbread and Starwberry Wine book, the other was from Winemaker's Recipe Handbook (purple 101 recipes).
The one on Jack's website from Norma adds no water, all juice and I think should work out better. However, the amount of acid blend seems to be off.
I pressed out 3 gallons of juice this evening. The recipe Jack references called for 3 tsp of acid blend for the 3 gallon recipe. The other called for 2.5 per gallon or 7.5 tsp for the 3 gallon. I had issues doing my TA test no mater how much acid I put in, I think my SHS from last fall might be bad, but my PH meter started at 4.2 PH, and yes it is calibrated. I stopped adding acid blend once I reached 9 tsp and PH of 3.7. I never got a good TA test using my Vintner's best acid testing kit.
All this to say, these watermelons that I grew were not high in acid as several have stated watermelon to be, just the opposite. Very high PH and low acid. I'm making a yeast starter and will pitch the starter tomorrow evening.
My question, should I continue to add acid blend to get the PH down to 3.4 or stay at the 3.7? During fermentation is it possible the TA will increase and the PH drop? I'm going to use Pasteur Champagne Yeast.
Thanks Dave
The one on Jack's website from Norma adds no water, all juice and I think should work out better. However, the amount of acid blend seems to be off.
I pressed out 3 gallons of juice this evening. The recipe Jack references called for 3 tsp of acid blend for the 3 gallon recipe. The other called for 2.5 per gallon or 7.5 tsp for the 3 gallon. I had issues doing my TA test no mater how much acid I put in, I think my SHS from last fall might be bad, but my PH meter started at 4.2 PH, and yes it is calibrated. I stopped adding acid blend once I reached 9 tsp and PH of 3.7. I never got a good TA test using my Vintner's best acid testing kit.
All this to say, these watermelons that I grew were not high in acid as several have stated watermelon to be, just the opposite. Very high PH and low acid. I'm making a yeast starter and will pitch the starter tomorrow evening.
My question, should I continue to add acid blend to get the PH down to 3.4 or stay at the 3.7? During fermentation is it possible the TA will increase and the PH drop? I'm going to use Pasteur Champagne Yeast.
Thanks Dave