I racked the Kookaburra tonight; it's about 2 months old and has a gorgeous garnet color.
After racking, I stirred and tasted it, and it was still gassy, despite degassing when I added the clarifiers and sitting at a constant temp of 74* for the last 5 weeks, bummer. I was sadly underwhelmed and disappointed by my thiefed sample: it had that same off-taste I taste in the 10L and 12L kits I've made, and I was really bummed. I bumped the carboy (it's plastic) when I tilted it to get the last bit during racking and mixed up the sediment, so I didn't end up racking as much as I'd hoped. I poured the leftover sediment and wine in a large glass to settle so that hubby could sample it when he came in from working on his project car. That glass sat for at least an hour after I tasted the thiefed sample, and hubby tasted it and said it tasted good, why was I disappointed? So I took a sip, and it was quite different and that weird flavor I've associated with midlevel kits was gone. I'm hoping that with aging (and/or breathing?), this will be a good wine. I still have the glass settling on the counter, so I've been sipping samples to see how it changes each hour. I'm more hopeful now than I was when I racked that this will turn out good. At this point, it doesn't seem as awesome as the Eclipse Cab or Showcase Carmenere I started in Jan and bottled in Jun, but I'm holding out that it will taste better than the WV Trinity and Sterling Malbec I learned winemaking on last summer. And yes, I know, youth and all, but I remember the En Primeur Super Tuscan, Eclipse Cab, and Showcase Carmenere being good at each racking and lacking that off flavor. The Kookaburra finished at 0.994, and I did not use sorbate. I'll leave it to bulk age 4 months before I bottle it.
I previously asked about additional tannins and oak, and I'll be doing neither. I think it's fine as-is from the settling glass and doesn't need any more tweaks for my tastes. I'm wary but hopeful about this one.