RonObvious
Senior Member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2016
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My 50 Marquette vines are in their 2nd year and will hopefully yield a crop next year. They seem to be doing well on our sunny, south facing hill side. The only major problem has been Japanese Beetles, which I took care of with a bit of Sevin.
Last year, while waiting for our vines to grow, we obtained some Marquette juice from the Finger Lakes. I have tasted other people's Marquettes and been very impressed, so I KNOW this grape can do great things. The juice we bought was pretty acidic (over 1.2 TA if memory serves) so I did the double-salt trick with calcium carbonate to try to get the acidity down. I only used about 2/3 of the recommended amount of calcium carbonate, however, because I have this chronic fear of overcorrecting. It went through MLF after fermentation. What I ended up with was a wine with both high TA AND high pH. Not where we want to be. Bottled it last week - very pleasant fruit flavor, powerful aromatics, beautiful color... but it tastes a bit sour. Not sour like it spoiled... just sour because the TA is still too high.
Observation #1 is that TA seems to contribute more to the perception of acidity than does pH. Maybe someone can confirm or deny this.
Observation #2 is that it probably started off with a LOT of malic acid. As I understand it, malic acid is stronger than tartaric or lactic, so when all that malic was chewed up by the MLF bacteria, it raised the pH. Yet lactic acid is still an acid, so it still contributes to the TA number. Which would explain the high pH AND high TA condition that resulted. Again, maybe someone can confirm or deny this too?
Anyway, I'm wondering what my strategy should be if it comes in with a really high TA again? 71B yeast? Or would it be pointless to use a yeast that consumes malic acid if one is planning on doing MLF anyway? How about cold stabilization? Double-salt again? Or just add CACO3 directly to the must and skip the double salt technique? And speaking of CACO3, would potassium bicarbonate be better? Or a blend of both? So many acid questions and only a couple weeks to figure it all out!
Last year, while waiting for our vines to grow, we obtained some Marquette juice from the Finger Lakes. I have tasted other people's Marquettes and been very impressed, so I KNOW this grape can do great things. The juice we bought was pretty acidic (over 1.2 TA if memory serves) so I did the double-salt trick with calcium carbonate to try to get the acidity down. I only used about 2/3 of the recommended amount of calcium carbonate, however, because I have this chronic fear of overcorrecting. It went through MLF after fermentation. What I ended up with was a wine with both high TA AND high pH. Not where we want to be. Bottled it last week - very pleasant fruit flavor, powerful aromatics, beautiful color... but it tastes a bit sour. Not sour like it spoiled... just sour because the TA is still too high.
Observation #1 is that TA seems to contribute more to the perception of acidity than does pH. Maybe someone can confirm or deny this.
Observation #2 is that it probably started off with a LOT of malic acid. As I understand it, malic acid is stronger than tartaric or lactic, so when all that malic was chewed up by the MLF bacteria, it raised the pH. Yet lactic acid is still an acid, so it still contributes to the TA number. Which would explain the high pH AND high TA condition that resulted. Again, maybe someone can confirm or deny this too?
Anyway, I'm wondering what my strategy should be if it comes in with a really high TA again? 71B yeast? Or would it be pointless to use a yeast that consumes malic acid if one is planning on doing MLF anyway? How about cold stabilization? Double-salt again? Or just add CACO3 directly to the must and skip the double salt technique? And speaking of CACO3, would potassium bicarbonate be better? Or a blend of both? So many acid questions and only a couple weeks to figure it all out!