What does the wine taste like? I'm guessing it's bland with a pH that high.
The simplest thing is to add tartaric acid. Warning: DO NOT blindly add acid to a wine, as it's easy to add too much.
Adding 1 g/l should reduce the pH by 0.1, and if you're working in US gallons, that's a scant 4 g in 1 gallon.
According to a chart published by Presque Isle, 1.3 g tartaric acid = 1/4 tsp, so 3/4 tsp per gallon will drop your pH to 4.0. This formula indicates that to drop the pH to 3.7, you need to add 3 tsp tartaric acid per gallon.
However -- heeding my above warning, don't add that much. I'd add just 3/4 tsp per gallon, stir well, and let the wine rest for 24 hours. Check the pH to see how it changed and taste the wine. Repeat as needed, paying attention to how much the pH drops after each addition and how you like the taste.
Remember my mantra -- it's easier to add more than to take some out.
High pH is an environment in which bacteria can grow more easily. How large is the batch?Well its not wine yet, it just started fermenting last night. I couldnt find an answer so i just tossed in some mangrove jack CY17 yeast.
The must is in a 5 gallon food grade bucket. So about 5 gallons.High pH is an environment in which bacteria can grow more easily. How large is the batch?
After pressing, probably 3.5 to 4 gallons.The must is in a 5 gallon food grade bucket. So about 5 gallons.
After pressing, probably 3.5 to 4 gallons.
Adding acid during fermentation can negatively affect the fermentation. I'd be tempted to add 1/2 tsp tartaric per day during stirring/punch down, as it's slight enough that it shouldn't harm the fermentation. Check the pH, and when the pH hits 3.9, stop additions.
After pressing, adjust acid down in small increments.
No, your questions are good questions. There is surprisingly little good information that is intelligible to beginners, while the net is full of bad advice. Making it worse is that there is typically more than one valid answer to a question.These are probably stupid questions but ive tried to find answers to and are a little confusing to me.
Tartaric is the predominant acid in most wines, so it's typically recommended. Other acids can be used, but they have side effects, e.g., citric acid is the predominant acid in citrus fruits, malic acid is what gives apples their tang, and "acid blend" varies so much by vendor that you have no idea what you're using.So from now on i should use tartaric acid to adjust high ph musts prior to fermentation and set it to the desired PH for the type of wine im making?
A lot of us shudder when we read, "I watched a video on YouTube, and ...." There are also a lot of misinformed blogs.You are correct, ive watched a lot of YouTube videos and read a lot of bs and there is little info about PH.
What about malic and citric acid? Is there a reason to use those pre ferment?
@wetneck, go with Raptor's advice instead of mine.The main acid in raspberries is citric acid:
Keep in mind that this is not necessarily a problem. Some old recipes are what someone got to work once. Others are the result of years of experimentation. It's hard to tell which is which.I’ve been blindly following my Black Raspberry recipe for years just adding the specified amount of acid blend to the must pre-ferment without ever checking the ph
I measured my new “planted this spring” Prime-Ark Freedom Primocane berries yesterday, just squeezed juice nothing else:I question your pH meter calibration/ reading on black raspberry. It may not be as bad as you think. My crop; (Wisconsin)
2014,, pH 3.59 TA ?
2018,, pH 3.58 TA 1.49%
2019,, pH 3.48 TA 1.81%
2020,, pH 3.87 TA 2.08%
2022,, pH 3.70 TA ,, wild collected at church
2022,, pH 3.64 ,, garden variety
Some variables producing pH / TA; in high sun ripens better so you get less acid, picking early gives more acid.
pH 5 works for shorter shelf life beverages like beer, your biggest risk probably is air exposure giving oxidized ethyl alcohol or micro infection.
Of course you really meant a false low pH reading, indicating more acid that there really isNEVER rely on pH measurements once fermentation has started. The very significant production of co2 during fermentation will give a false high readings. (Making one think there is more acid in the wine must)
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