Per my other thread, I am working on plum wine. The recipe I am working to says to cut up and mash the fruit, then boil the water, add sugar to boiling water, and then pour the hot sugar water mix on the fruit. So initially the must is hot. The instructions say to let cool before adding Campden and other additives. My first two batches, I prepped in the morning and let them cool down for a few hours and added the K-Met in the afternoon. They were still warm but not "hot". I prepped a batch last night with the intent of adding K-Met this morning. So the delay was about 11 hours. This third batch looks like it might have started fermenting on the wilds. Here is a photo:
It was a little foamy on the top. So here is my main question:
Is there any problem adding the K-Met right away while the must is still pretty hot (say 160F)?
other questions:
I added K-Met this morning but is this batch a goner? My plan was to add EC-1118 tomorrow morning.
Maybe I should dip the fruit in Star San solution before cutting?
I tried to look up if that was a suggested practice but found no definitive answer. Best I got was it couldn't hurt but not a substitute for K-met. I just don't want to dip in Star-San if that is a known bad idea.
I washed the plums in water before cutting but only washed them.
It was a little foamy on the top. So here is my main question:
Is there any problem adding the K-Met right away while the must is still pretty hot (say 160F)?
other questions:
I added K-Met this morning but is this batch a goner? My plan was to add EC-1118 tomorrow morning.
Maybe I should dip the fruit in Star San solution before cutting?
I tried to look up if that was a suggested practice but found no definitive answer. Best I got was it couldn't hurt but not a substitute for K-met. I just don't want to dip in Star-San if that is a known bad idea.
I washed the plums in water before cutting but only washed them.