No. But keep them on hand in case of a stuck fermentation. EC1118 is excellent for restarting difficult ferments.The Winexpert Bruno kit has 2 yeast. It has RC 212 and EC1118 I was planning on switching out for BM 4 X 4. Do I need 2 yeasts?
The Winexpert Bruno kit has 2 yeast. It has RC 212 and EC1118 I was planning on switching out for BM 4 X 4. Do I need 2 yeasts?
Use bothThe Winexpert Bruno kit has 2 yeast. It has RC 212 and EC1118 I was planning on switching out for BM 4 X 4. Do I need 2 yeasts?
Their , there for both characteristics and ABV value .Use both
Curious what your protocol is for the EC1118 2nd inoculation in a "highish" ABV situation?An update on my Zin kit -- the ferment slowed when the SG got below 1.010 and appears to have stuck at 1.002. While I could have waited, this is close enough to RC-212's ABV tolerance that I made an EC-1118 starter and added it.
The reason for going with RC-212 first and letting it go as far as it could is that RC-212 emphasizes fruit and spice notes, really good characteristics for a full bodied red wine. OTOH, EC-1118 is simply a work horse that pretty much guarantees a complete ferment up to 18% ABV.
By doing a 2 stage inoculation I got as much as possible from the RC-212 and the EC-1118 simply completed the ferment. If I co-inoculated, I'd have no idea what the result would be.
The initial inoculation with RC-212 was my standard method -- I made an overnight starter and inoculated in the morning.Curious what your protocol is for the EC1118 2nd inoculation in a "highish" ABV situation?
Do you introduce/add any of the fermented must to the EC1118 starter prior to adding entire starter to the wine? In researching making sparkling wines...I've seen this mentioned as a way to help acclimate the EC1118 to an already alcohol rich environment.The initial inoculation with RC-212 was my standard method -- I made an overnight starter and inoculated in the morning.
For various reasons, I monitored the SG on this one tighter than normal, taking a reading every morning. I had several ideas in mind, but decided to let the RC-212 go as far as it could. The ferment slowed down below 1.020 (which isn't unusual), so at 1.002 I made an EC-1118 starter that evening.
It might have been a waste of yeast, but I wasn't confident the RC-212 would finish. When the SG was 1.002 the following morning, I knew I guessed right and added the EC-1118 starter.
My recommendation for a protocol?
I recommend EC-1118 as the second yeast. A strain that can reliably be added to a high ABV must and thrive is required, and EC-1118 doesn't have a lot of competitors in that regard. The first strain provides whatever its qualities are, and the second one eats any remaining sugar.
- Look at the OG and figure the potential ABV (depending on method, mine ranged from 15.8% to 16.3%).
- Compare that to the first yeast's ABV tolerance (RC-212 is 16%).
- Let the first yeast go to its completion OR pick an SG at which to inoculate with the second strain.
- Make an EC-1118 starter and inoculate at the decided time.
- Let it finish.
No, I just added the starter, carefully pouring it down the inside of the fermenter.Do you introduce/add any of the fermented must to the EC1118 starter prior to adding entire starter to the wine? In researching making sparkling wines...I've seen this mentioned as a way to help acclimate the EC1118 to an already alcohol rich environment.
Curious what the highest ABV must/vino you've successfully added a 2nd EC1118 starter to and finished the fermentation to dry.?The initial inoculation with RC-212 was my standard method -- I made an overnight starter and inoculated in the morning.
For various reasons, I monitored the SG on this one tighter than normal, taking a reading every morning. I had several ideas in mind, but decided to let the RC-212 go as far as it could. The ferment slowed down below 1.020 (which isn't unusual), so at 1.002 I made an EC-1118 starter that evening.
It might have been a waste of yeast, but I wasn't confident the RC-212 would finish. When the SG was 1.002 the following morning, I knew I guessed right and added the EC-1118 starter.
My recommendation for a protocol?
I recommend EC-1118 as the second yeast. A strain that can reliably be added to a high ABV must and thrive is required, and EC-1118 doesn't have a lot of competitors in that regard. The first strain provides whatever its qualities are, and the second one eats any remaining sugar.
- Look at the OG and figure the potential ABV (depending on method, mine ranged from 15.8% to 16.3%).
- Compare that to the first yeast's ABV tolerance (RC-212 is 16%).
- Let the first yeast go to its completion OR pick an SG at which to inoculate with the second strain.
- Make an EC-1118 starter and inoculate at the decided time.
- Let it finish.
This one. I don't typically make high ABV wines.Curious what the highest ABV must/vino you've successfully added a 2nd EC1118 starter to and finished the fermentation to dry.?
Enter your email address to join: