John Pichnic
Fledgling
Wow, that's a lot of juice! I'm guessing that it is juice on bottom and fruit mush on top. You only added 2-3 gallons of apple juice?
This is todayView attachment 54069
Wow, that's a lot of juice! I'm guessing that it is juice on bottom and fruit mush on top. You only added 2-3 gallons of apple juice?
No view of the inside action???
I don't see any hydrometer readings, looks like it's moving along, just curious where it's at.
Tastes like banana.So what does the finished wine taste like? Banana I’m sure but what would you compare it too in the realm of white wines?
That’s about right, I can drink a bottle of anything else and I can’t even tell it, but I can drink a bottle of the banana and can really tell I’ve drank it.The 14# sugar addition to a 23.2 BRIX must, yields a SG of 1.1285. If it really finished below .990 at .986, I'd say that you're pushing 19.2 % or 19.3 %...........that's pretty stout!!!!
Yes, 71b. I suspect that it’s the type of sugar in the bananas. I’m thinking that the yeast is able to utilize more of it.25% Wow! That's strong mix-drink territory.
I've been suspecting that I was breaking the 18% limit of EC-1118.
You used 71B?
Racked off today, got 16.5 gallons. Got my refractometer that I measure sg with and measured for grins and giggles, got a reading of 10 brix.. took the one I bought for measuring alcohol (wasn’t sure on this one) and it measured 25. If that’s accurate then that’s a pretty stout wine.
Probably worth mentioning that any residual sugar will greatly throw off the refractometer measurements. For example, my Catawba completed fermentation and measured 7.0 on the refractometer. I can guarantee it is not 18%abv, so I figure it is upwards of 2% RS on top of a 10%abv wine.
I'd bet your banana wine has substantial RS. 71B is a decent fermenter, but not a Superman!
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