RonObvious
Senior Member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2016
- Messages
- 123
- Reaction score
- 32
Both buckets of Marquette did a strange thing this year - As I was racking them after primary fermentation, I noticed they both threw off what look like tartrate crystals on the sides of the buckets. Quite a lot of it, actually. Even stranger, one yeast appeared to throw more crystals than the other. I used RC212 in one bucket and Premier Cuvee in the other. The RC212 batch produced a moderate amount of larger crystals on the sides of the bucket. The Premier Cuvee produced a LOT of fine crystals, to the point that rubbing your hand on the inside of the bucket, you'd swear you were rubbing 60 grit sandpaper. Pain in the neck to wash off, too.
I don't recall ever seeing this happen before, especially with red wine. So far the wine tastes fine, so I guess I'm not too worried. Starting TA was .75 and pH was 4.0. The pH after fermentation was still 4.0. I did not re-check the TA, though I probably should have. I inoculated with MLF when I racked. Wondering if I should add tartaric acid to bring the pH down? Or see where it stands after MLF is complete...?
I don't recall ever seeing this happen before, especially with red wine. So far the wine tastes fine, so I guess I'm not too worried. Starting TA was .75 and pH was 4.0. The pH after fermentation was still 4.0. I did not re-check the TA, though I probably should have. I inoculated with MLF when I racked. Wondering if I should add tartaric acid to bring the pH down? Or see where it stands after MLF is complete...?