There must be a logical explanation for it. Incomplete AF, late MLF or addition of something with fermentable sugars in it. What's your guess?Thanks to the record high temperatures my 2023 wine wants to keep on bubbling.
Close on #4... Glad you don't have a clean up.I am guessing MLF kicking in again, although it could be a little AF as well. Maybe even a little outgassing of CO2. The place I store this wine stays cold over the winter and likely MLF did not complete. I have seen it happen before, so I stay 2 years in bulk. At least it did not spill all over the floor this time.
Sulfite protects from more than just O2. I allow extra headspace the first few weeks of heavy outgassing, but after that K-meta is a good idea.I would add sulfite but for the last two years I stopped because there is so much trapped CO2, my wines remain protected.
This is probably another side effect of the temperature change -- with the increased temperature, the wine can hold less CO2 in suspension.Okay, I agree now that this looks like outgassing.
I found that using a vacuum pump to rack the wine a couple of times after fermentation gets rid of most trapped CO2. I usually vacuum-rack once after AF is complete and then again in a month or so after MLF is done.Okay, I agree now that this looks like outgassing. The bubbles are more vigorous than MLF and also I made chromatography tests that confirmed MLF completion.
Are you ok with wine in your airlocks or is the point of the photo simply to show barometric pressure changes.
View attachment 113875
This is what I found in the wine cellar this afternoon. Thanks to the record high temperatures my 2023 wine wants to keep on bubbling.
It’s not an ideal situation . All airlocks were cleaned and filled with fresh Kmeta solution.Are you ok with wine in your airlocks or is the point of the photo simply to show barometric pressure changes.
These are handy for overflows:Close on #4... Glad you don't have a clean up.
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