Sudz
Sudz
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2009
- Messages
- 130
- Reaction score
- 2
I thought I'd share a little oops I discovered in my wine making which may save someone a headache. I just poured out the better part of three years of production because I found I had virtually no SO2 in my treasured inventory. Yes, I did taste them first...
I always put the classical 1/4 tsp kmeta in every batch prior to bottling. All these wines were good going into the bottle and much improved in about 6 months. Some were excellent, all were enjoyable. However, they all started to develop a taste which killed the possibility of continuing to drink them. The taste was sort of moldy prunes for want of a better description.
At first I considered oxidation as the culprit but ruled this out simply because my process is very attentive to restricting encounters with air. And the color remained great on all of the tainted wine. This is an issue with reds since none of my whites made it 6 months..
I considered SO2 but didn't have a way to accurately measure the stuff. I had been using the little titrets as encouraged by my LHBS. Discovered these don't actually work all that well on reds and shouldn't be used on them.
I eventually developed an AO system for titrating the SO2 involved. This immediately identified my problem. My Potassium Metabisulfite was only about 20% full strength. I had been using the same bottle since day one, about 3 1/2 years. I knew it didn't keep once it was added to water but early "advice" received told me it kept forever on the shelf.... WRONG!
So those relying on their kmeta be forewarned. If you're not adding what's required at bottling using fresh kmeta, your wine will go bad.
Apparently if the stock you're using is fresh it will last 6 - 12 months. I guess the first question is do you know if your stock was fresh when you received it?
I've gone nuts measuring SO2 on everything we drink and have found some interesting things but then thats for another post someday.
Bottom line, make certain you have the appropriate level of SO2 in anything you bottle "if" you plan on keeping in around for very long.
Cheers....
I always put the classical 1/4 tsp kmeta in every batch prior to bottling. All these wines were good going into the bottle and much improved in about 6 months. Some were excellent, all were enjoyable. However, they all started to develop a taste which killed the possibility of continuing to drink them. The taste was sort of moldy prunes for want of a better description.
At first I considered oxidation as the culprit but ruled this out simply because my process is very attentive to restricting encounters with air. And the color remained great on all of the tainted wine. This is an issue with reds since none of my whites made it 6 months..
I considered SO2 but didn't have a way to accurately measure the stuff. I had been using the little titrets as encouraged by my LHBS. Discovered these don't actually work all that well on reds and shouldn't be used on them.
I eventually developed an AO system for titrating the SO2 involved. This immediately identified my problem. My Potassium Metabisulfite was only about 20% full strength. I had been using the same bottle since day one, about 3 1/2 years. I knew it didn't keep once it was added to water but early "advice" received told me it kept forever on the shelf.... WRONG!
So those relying on their kmeta be forewarned. If you're not adding what's required at bottling using fresh kmeta, your wine will go bad.
Apparently if the stock you're using is fresh it will last 6 - 12 months. I guess the first question is do you know if your stock was fresh when you received it?
I've gone nuts measuring SO2 on everything we drink and have found some interesting things but then thats for another post someday.
Bottom line, make certain you have the appropriate level of SO2 in anything you bottle "if" you plan on keeping in around for very long.
Cheers....