wine seems to have a “medicinal” taste to it
I assume both batches exhibit this medicinal taste. Everyone's definition of "medicinal" is different, but my thoughts are:
- It's young. It will change (improve) during the coming months in the bottle.
- You may simply be objecting to the normal, characteristic flavour of Dragon Blood -- more likely because of the lemon juice as opposed to not enough of it. Not everyone likes Dragon Blood. Try a batch according to the recipe (1 lb per gallon of blueberry / blackberry / raspberry frozen blend) and 48 oz of Real Lemon, to get a baseline. If you don't like that, or at least see its potential after 6 months in the bottle, then DB might not be for you. I personally go for 32 oz Real Lemon and 1.5 to 2 times the berries.
- Possibly because of the higher ABV than you were expecting (see #1 below).
- Not enough, or too much backsweetening (see #2 & #5 below). Blueberry is especially highly acidic, I'm not sure about strawberry.
- Not likely, but it could be due to insufficient clearing, which would leave some fine lees in suspension (see #4 below).
- I like cough syrup, you mean you don't?
For my own curiosity, and to get a better feel for your final ABV:
- What was your SG before adding the sugar that brought it back up to 1.044?
- What was your SG after fermentation completed and before adding sorbate and sugar for backsweetening?
- What was your SG after backsweetening? Many people don't record this as it is just done to taste, but maybe you measured how many cups of sugar you added per gallon or per 3 gallon batch?
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OK, now for the book... I'm sorry, I am just the curious type, and wanted to make sure our terminology was the same, and to explain in more detail my comments above. Feel free to skip it. Maybe next time I write a book I'll use a "spoiler" block so it doesn't take up so much room.
i added the syrup as most of you recommended to boost my levels back up to 1.044 .
1. That's not quite what we recommended.
@RichardC suggested taking it up to about 1.032, and I recommended 1.024. These are assuming your must was 0.998 before adding the sugar. (i.e., RichardC suggested raising the SG by 0.034 and I recommended raising it by 0.026.) 1.044 may give you closer to 12% ABV, depending on your SG at the time you added the sugar, and your final SG.
Update .....they’ve been back sweetened per your instructions , all cleared up and bottling this week...
2. I don't see any backsweetening instruction is this thread. If you are referring to the sugar added to bring the SG from below 1.000 back up to 1.044 again, that is not backsweetening (I'll talk about that in comment #5), it is "chaptalization," which is the technical term for adding sugar to an active fermentation to increase the final ABV. The distinction is very important: that sugar does not sweeten the wine. If you're referring to the backsweetening instructions in the Dragon Blood recipe, then ignore this comment.
I used 3 pounds of each fruit for each batch
3. You mean 3 pounds
per gallon of each fruit for each batch, correct? For a total of
9 pounds of each fruit for each batch?
4. Judging from that, your pictures, and the amount of time you waited, I think you will get some sediment in the bottles if left for more more than a couple of weeks. If you didn't use clear bottles you might not even notice it though. Anyone (at least to my knowledge) that has tried KC (Kieselsol & Chitosan / SuperKleer / DualFine) after using Sparkolloid never goes back. It gives very compact lees, very quickly (usually). My last 2 batches of DB are now dropping sediment in the bottle, even though I used SuperKleer, and they were
crystal clear. (I posted pictures in the Dragon Blood thread.)
they’ve been back sweetened per your instructions ,
5. Backsweetening is sugar you add after stabilizing a completely finished fermentation (SG the same for 3 days in a row AND below about 1.000). Stabilizing refers to adding k-meta
and sorbate to prevent the added sugar from fermenting again. As I stated above, you may know this already, and I apologize if you do, but from your posts I wasn't sure. Sugar tends to help cover up acidity & bitterness, did you do bench trials to determine the best level of sweetness?