I was recently advised to try out gelatin for removing bitter tannins from a wild strawberry wine. It also needed clearing, so I went ahead. Only a third of the gelatin in the sachet would be used for this purpose, so I decided to try it out on my forest berry wine (wild varieties of blueberries, raspberries, strawberries) as well.
After about 24 hours, the strawberry wine had cleared out beautifully, with a sediment layer on the bottom of the container. However, remaining was also a thin layer of gelatin floating on top. Not a lot, but nothing you'd want in your bottles.
Will it fall to the bottom, eventually? If not, how can I remove it? It looked kind of clumpy, so I tried filtering it out through a fine meshed tea strainer. That was a waste of time.
Another concern is the sediment layer, which seems to be very light and therefore easily gets "airborne". Makes me think racking may become a bit of a challenge. Especially with the dark forest berry wine, which can't be monitored the way a transparent wine can be.
After about 24 hours, the strawberry wine had cleared out beautifully, with a sediment layer on the bottom of the container. However, remaining was also a thin layer of gelatin floating on top. Not a lot, but nothing you'd want in your bottles.
Will it fall to the bottom, eventually? If not, how can I remove it? It looked kind of clumpy, so I tried filtering it out through a fine meshed tea strainer. That was a waste of time.
Another concern is the sediment layer, which seems to be very light and therefore easily gets "airborne". Makes me think racking may become a bit of a challenge. Especially with the dark forest berry wine, which can't be monitored the way a transparent wine can be.