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- Aug 5, 2011
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Argument against adding lots of sugar up front and planning that it will stall out.
1) your yeast may never start fermenting at all, there is a maximum sugar percent that the yeast will start at.
2) your yeast might be suoer strong, have lots of nutrients and end up getting to 18 or 20% abv. Or alternativly your yeast might be from the slow end of the batch and only make 12%abv so you end up with a sweeter brew than you plan on.
3) Wine is very much a balancing act, at 12% abv the sugar amount left over to make a nice, well balanced wine might be much less or much more than you plan for at the start.
1) your yeast may never start fermenting at all, there is a maximum sugar percent that the yeast will start at.
2) your yeast might be suoer strong, have lots of nutrients and end up getting to 18 or 20% abv. Or alternativly your yeast might be from the slow end of the batch and only make 12%abv so you end up with a sweeter brew than you plan on.
3) Wine is very much a balancing act, at 12% abv the sugar amount left over to make a nice, well balanced wine might be much less or much more than you plan for at the start.