Hi-
I'm really scratching my head- we just finished harvesting a couple tons of pinot noir from Eola-Amity in Oregon. I took a sample to ETS labs for an initial juice panel and got the following:
pH: 3.31
TA: 4.9 g/L
L-malic: 1.22 g/L
brix: 23.2
YAN: 95 mg/L
potassium: 1270 mg/L
My first reaction was to mistrust the lab's results: how could the pH be so low with such a low TA? However, I performed a subsequent titration for TA myself, with a must sample blended in a high-speed blender first, and got the same results.
Could the high potassium be somehow binding with tartaric acid in the must and therefore keeping it from showing up in the titration? Or are there other acids present that would be lowering the pH? The initial thought would be malic, but at only 1.22 g/L it seems too low to have the necessary downward influence on pH.
The big question is: what to do? Should we correct with tartaric acid to bring TA up to the 6-7 range, disregarding the impact on pH, or wait and taste it, and risk a barrel addition that might be noticeable in the glass?
We plan on doing MLF (pH up), and could possibly do a cold stabilization to try and drop some of the potassium out (pH down). The problem with dropping the tartrates obviously is that our TA will be even lower.
No one I've talked to knows what's going on here- does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks a lot for taking the time!
I'm really scratching my head- we just finished harvesting a couple tons of pinot noir from Eola-Amity in Oregon. I took a sample to ETS labs for an initial juice panel and got the following:
pH: 3.31
TA: 4.9 g/L
L-malic: 1.22 g/L
brix: 23.2
YAN: 95 mg/L
potassium: 1270 mg/L
My first reaction was to mistrust the lab's results: how could the pH be so low with such a low TA? However, I performed a subsequent titration for TA myself, with a must sample blended in a high-speed blender first, and got the same results.
Could the high potassium be somehow binding with tartaric acid in the must and therefore keeping it from showing up in the titration? Or are there other acids present that would be lowering the pH? The initial thought would be malic, but at only 1.22 g/L it seems too low to have the necessary downward influence on pH.
The big question is: what to do? Should we correct with tartaric acid to bring TA up to the 6-7 range, disregarding the impact on pH, or wait and taste it, and risk a barrel addition that might be noticeable in the glass?
We plan on doing MLF (pH up), and could possibly do a cold stabilization to try and drop some of the potassium out (pH down). The problem with dropping the tartrates obviously is that our TA will be even lower.
No one I've talked to knows what's going on here- does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks a lot for taking the time!