JerryF
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2013
- Messages
- 164
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There's probably already something about this on WMT somewhere but I haven't looked too deeply yet. One of the batches of kit wine that I'd recently done and now bottled for almost a month (Chianti) turned out quite well but going back through some of my notes yesterday I ran across where I'd actually used "distilled" water for my volume adjustments when putting it together. Now, it did eventually finish okay but I have other notes where I recorded my fermentation was less vigorous that I'd expected it to be. Temperature was maintained throughout ( 70 - 73 F) and I used the Lalvin 1118 yeast (dry; surface cast). When I did the water additions, as I state here, I used distilled water (because I had a bunch on hand). Well, I figured it's pretty "pure" so why not? Now it dawns on me though, I have seen comments on WMT and elsewhere that distilling water generally strips free oxygen out which is needed during primary fermentation! I took better notes with a batch I just put on several days ago (another thread- Wine Makers Choice Beaujolais) and the MAJOR differences are that I used commercial spring water (filtered but not distilled) and rehydrated my 1118 yeast before casting (per kit directions). Temperature being maintained roughly same range (72 - 74 F), pretty much all else being equal. EXCEPT - I have a VERY vigorous fermentation going on with a big cap almost 4 inches layer of heavy foam and bubbles on top! I can accept that the difference in how the yeast was introduced might have "some" effect but I'm putting the difference in activity level of fermentation down as the type of water I used! Lot's of oxygen!! I am somewhat surprised at the difference and don't ever plan on using distilled water again! Would I get any agreement on this?
Jerry
Jerry