- Joined
- Jan 19, 2018
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- 76
I'm stuck again.
Couple nights ago I thawed out 48lbs of Muscadine grapes I harvested early July. Got them pressed and came up with four gallons of juice, pulpy thick mess and all. Using Jack Kellers ratio, I calculated to added six gallons of water which was done leaving me 10 gallons of starting must. That has been split into two 5gal primaries where it sits at this moment. Five Campden tabs were added to each at that time (yesterday/Friday) I'm think I'm good to that point.
Testing tartaric acid, I keep coming up with 1.1% as measured by both titration and a calibrated pH meter (the magic 8.2pH number was achieved when I put 11cc's of reagent in my test cup) The juice of these grapes WILL irritate/burn the skin if it gets on you. I'm confident that 1.1% number is correct. It's acidic grape juice.
Looking at what I have available to me, all I have is potassium bicarbonate. Package says to "add 1-1/3tsp per gallon prior to fining lowers acid 0.1%. Cold stabilize before racking off the tartrate precipitate. NOT recommended to reduce acid more than 0.3% or to use on wines higher than 3.5".
Wow. I'm not sure what all that means other than to get this down into the .7% range I need to add 26 tsp to get it right? And then it's not even recommended for more than .3% change and I need to go .4%. AND I need a place in the fridge to let this sit for a few days? My fridge isn't that big.
I'm trying to not dilute it anymore with water and I don't have room in the fridge to crash it.
What would you do to get this acid under control?
Couple nights ago I thawed out 48lbs of Muscadine grapes I harvested early July. Got them pressed and came up with four gallons of juice, pulpy thick mess and all. Using Jack Kellers ratio, I calculated to added six gallons of water which was done leaving me 10 gallons of starting must. That has been split into two 5gal primaries where it sits at this moment. Five Campden tabs were added to each at that time (yesterday/Friday) I'm think I'm good to that point.
Testing tartaric acid, I keep coming up with 1.1% as measured by both titration and a calibrated pH meter (the magic 8.2pH number was achieved when I put 11cc's of reagent in my test cup) The juice of these grapes WILL irritate/burn the skin if it gets on you. I'm confident that 1.1% number is correct. It's acidic grape juice.
Looking at what I have available to me, all I have is potassium bicarbonate. Package says to "add 1-1/3tsp per gallon prior to fining lowers acid 0.1%. Cold stabilize before racking off the tartrate precipitate. NOT recommended to reduce acid more than 0.3% or to use on wines higher than 3.5".
Wow. I'm not sure what all that means other than to get this down into the .7% range I need to add 26 tsp to get it right? And then it's not even recommended for more than .3% change and I need to go .4%. AND I need a place in the fridge to let this sit for a few days? My fridge isn't that big.
I'm trying to not dilute it anymore with water and I don't have room in the fridge to crash it.
What would you do to get this acid under control?