Hi,
Do I need to use anything more than just potassium metabisulfite when stabilizing a mead that has not been back-sweetened, but does have some residual sugar?
Recently, I've been doing meads with D47 and enough sugar to get it to 13.5%. Batches are tending to finish primary fermentation with a little bit of residual sugar. Not a lot, but definitely some. We're talking like the amount you'd get from an off-the-shelf cabernet that's not completely dry. I like this amount of sweetness. I'm thinking to let is sit for a month or two, rack off any additional lees that settle out, and hit it with some k-meta, and then bottle.
Is this a reasonable approach? I know that theoretically, the fermentation could restart, blah blah blah. In theory, yeast can do all sorts of things. I've never heard anyone try this, so I'm really interested in real life experiences here. I'm honestly interested if anyone can say something like "Well in theory, this isn't a great idea, but in reality, this will probably always work." or "No, this actually won't probably always work. Here's what happened to me.", or whatever else.
Do I need to use anything more than just potassium metabisulfite when stabilizing a mead that has not been back-sweetened, but does have some residual sugar?
Recently, I've been doing meads with D47 and enough sugar to get it to 13.5%. Batches are tending to finish primary fermentation with a little bit of residual sugar. Not a lot, but definitely some. We're talking like the amount you'd get from an off-the-shelf cabernet that's not completely dry. I like this amount of sweetness. I'm thinking to let is sit for a month or two, rack off any additional lees that settle out, and hit it with some k-meta, and then bottle.
Is this a reasonable approach? I know that theoretically, the fermentation could restart, blah blah blah. In theory, yeast can do all sorts of things. I've never heard anyone try this, so I'm really interested in real life experiences here. I'm honestly interested if anyone can say something like "Well in theory, this isn't a great idea, but in reality, this will probably always work." or "No, this actually won't probably always work. Here's what happened to me.", or whatever else.