Yesterday @VinesnBines, her husband, and I crushed grapes from their SW Virginia vineyard. I purchased ~120 lbs each Vidal and Chambourcin, which were each in 3 different containers for transport home.
Last night I separated out 4 gallons of Vidal juice and put the remaining juice and pulp in a separate container for "orange" wine, and divided the Chambourcin roughly in half, as I'm using 2 different yeast.
This morning I checked brix and pH. The Vidal containers had the same brix, as did the Chambourcin containers.
After calibrating my pH meter, I took readings:
Vidal Juice - 3.24
Vidal Grape - 3.31
Chambourcin 1 - 3.40
Chambourcin 2 - 3.24
The differences between the Vidal didn't surprise me, as the grapes macerated all night. The Chambourcin difference was a surprise, so I checked all readings again, and got identical results.
This illustrates that every bunch of grapes is potentially different, and it's wise to check vineyard reported numbers, as they report on the specific grapes they checked, and the aggregate can be different.
Last night I separated out 4 gallons of Vidal juice and put the remaining juice and pulp in a separate container for "orange" wine, and divided the Chambourcin roughly in half, as I'm using 2 different yeast.
This morning I checked brix and pH. The Vidal containers had the same brix, as did the Chambourcin containers.
After calibrating my pH meter, I took readings:
Vidal Juice - 3.24
Vidal Grape - 3.31
Chambourcin 1 - 3.40
Chambourcin 2 - 3.24
The differences between the Vidal didn't surprise me, as the grapes macerated all night. The Chambourcin difference was a surprise, so I checked all readings again, and got identical results.
This illustrates that every bunch of grapes is potentially different, and it's wise to check vineyard reported numbers, as they report on the specific grapes they checked, and the aggregate can be different.