Brian Feeder Of Fish
Junior
After a good deal of reading various fruit wine logs and recipes, I'm planning to start a batch of blueberry sometime in the next few weeks depending on when I see a good price on blueberries. I've developed a plan (outlined below), based on what I've compiled from other blueberry discussions on the forum. I'd appreciate if those more experienced than me could chime in with anything I might have missed or if I'm planning to do something foolish. As I go through the process of making the wine, I intend to share my progress and observations in case I end up doing something foolish I didn't plan and so others can ask questions to nudge me toward the things I haven't been paying enough attention to.
Based on what I've read, the biggest potential problem I see right now is managing the often low pH of blueberries. Since I'm still new to the hobby I haven't accumulated too many toys yet and don't have anything more sophisticated for measuring pH or acid content than pH paper. From my experience with a batch of Skeeter Pee, the paper seems to give at least enough resolution to determine if I'm in the generally accepted 3.0-3.5 range. My thinking is that as long as I can keep within that range to ensure yeast effectivity and preservation capability, any other adjustments can be made by taste. Does that logic make sense, or is blueberry troublesome enough in this regard that I'm being too optimistic? (If I'm really lucky what I'd like to happen is the somewhat hard and alkaline leaning water I have be just right to offset the acidity of the berries and bring the whole batch in to a good range, but what are the odds of that?)
The other thing that I'm concerned about is how much volume loss from gross lees I'm anticipating. My expectation is to go from around 7 gallons in primary fermentation down to 5 during bulk aging, hopefully with at least a few extra 750mL bottles for top up/surplus. Once again, has optimism got the best of me?
Intended Procedure:
Based on what I've read, the biggest potential problem I see right now is managing the often low pH of blueberries. Since I'm still new to the hobby I haven't accumulated too many toys yet and don't have anything more sophisticated for measuring pH or acid content than pH paper. From my experience with a batch of Skeeter Pee, the paper seems to give at least enough resolution to determine if I'm in the generally accepted 3.0-3.5 range. My thinking is that as long as I can keep within that range to ensure yeast effectivity and preservation capability, any other adjustments can be made by taste. Does that logic make sense, or is blueberry troublesome enough in this regard that I'm being too optimistic? (If I'm really lucky what I'd like to happen is the somewhat hard and alkaline leaning water I have be just right to offset the acidity of the berries and bring the whole batch in to a good range, but what are the odds of that?)
The other thing that I'm concerned about is how much volume loss from gross lees I'm anticipating. My expectation is to go from around 7 gallons in primary fermentation down to 5 during bulk aging, hopefully with at least a few extra 750mL bottles for top up/surplus. Once again, has optimism got the best of me?
Intended Procedure:
- Prepare yeast starter with 1 cup warm water, 1 packet 71B-1122 yeast, 1/2 tsp sugar, 1/2 tsp GoFerm.
- Crush 45-50 lbs of blueberries and put them in a mesh bag(s?) in must bucket.
- Add ~5lbs sugar to must bucket, top up with water to ~7 gallons, add sugar to SG 1.070.
- Add 1 1/2 tsp FT blanc soft tannin, 4 1/2 tsp Fermaid-O, 4 Tbsp pectinase, 1/4 tsp K-meta.
- Stir vigorously, let set overnight.
- Add sugar to reach SG 1.090. If necessary, adjust (approximate, measured by paper) pH to between 3.0-3.5 up using calcium carbonate or down using lemon juice.
- Stir vigorously, add yeast starter.
- Stir daily.
- At SG 1.060 add 4 tsp Fermaid-O.
- Stir daily.
- At SG <1.030 transfer into a carboy (aiming for ~6 gal) with airlock; squeeze mesh bags to extract as much liquid as possible. Stop daily stirring.
- At dry rack into a carboy (aiming for ~5 gal) with airlock; agitate during racking to aid degassing.
- Add 1/4 tsp K-meta, 1 tsp K-sorbate.
- Wait patiently. Rack again if necessary to remove gross lees.
- After 4-6 months and wine is clear, rack, 1/4 tsp K-meta, backsweeten to taste.
- Wait 2 weeks add 1/4 tsp K-meta and bottle.
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