Jim (
@Jim Welch) offers a good solution. I'd recommend that except the wine was bottled too young, and it's likely to drop sediment in the bottle.
To add K-meta to gallon/4 liter jugs, I put 5 to 6 Tbsp water in a sanitized glass, add 1/4 tsp K-meta, and stir to blend. I add 1 Tbsp of that mixture to each jug. For your needs, double the K-meta to 1/2 tsp, and put 1/5 of a Tbsp in each bottle. I suggest using an on-line calculator to translate tablespoons to ml, and use a medical type syringe (for medicine, not the needle type).
I concur with Paul (
@sour_grapes), K-meta doesn't affect commercial yeast at the strength we use. However, you used indigenous yeast, which is one of thousands of strains of yeast. Personally, I use commercial yeast rather than praying for a good strain to live on the skins of my grapes.
Fred (
@mainshipfred) may be correct that the wine is not fixable. I'd give it a try, but realize it may not work out as hoped. This is another reason to unbottle the wine -- you have to pull the corks to treat the wine, regardless of method. If you put it in a carboy and it's not fixable, you haven't gone through the time and expense of a second corking for nothing.
Note that everyone who responded is an experienced winemaker whose advice is solid -- everything offered is spot on.
In general, on which stage do you add PMS to your wine? I mean, i understand that the pms kills all living forms including yeasts in the wine, which means when i add pms fermentation will be stopped, but the thing is I saw the micoderma after the fermantation ended...Sounds like I have no option other than ending the fermentation by adding pms, or if i do not want to stop it manually and if there is any problem during the fermantation like sealing issue I will definetly face the micoderma again. So it eems like I have to find a solution to this oxygen, next time I will try to use carboy or fill the bucket with wine at higher level. Agree with this?
The problem is not if the fermenter sealed -- it's that you sealed air instead of CO2 inside the fermenter.
The process you used makes no sense, as Fred pointed out. You will be best served by changing your process:
Choice 1: Ferment the wine until the SG is below 1.000. Press the grapes and put the wine in carboys. You can leave extra headspace for a couple of weeks as the wine completes fermentation and starts degassing, but within 2 weeks of pressing, rack off the sediment and top all containers within 3" of the stopper. Add K-meta at each racking. Add K-meta every 3 months during bulk aging.
Choice 2: Ferment the wine until the SG is between 1.020 and 1.010, give it a final punch down, and seal the fermenter under airlock. On Day 14 (from the start), unseal the fermenter and press. From there it's like Choice 1. This is a short EM (Extended Maceration). While some folks do EM a lot longer, I don't recommend it for beginners.
There are numerous processes that can be used, but the above are good for beginners.
Regardless how this wine fares, I suggest you buy a kit or two and use them for practice. Finer Wine Kits (sold by Label Peelers), Winexpert, and RJ Spagnols all make good kits.