DragonTail
Junior
New to wine making. Started with a kit, followed instructions from a-z, turned out great. Moved on to country fruit wines. I am using a Jack Keller winemaking book and have 5 gallon recipes going now. These recipes call for an extended post fermentation time in the carboy/jug. Couple questions on this process.
1) Once fermentation is done and the wine is clear, I assume this is just an aging process. What is the difference between aging it in the carboy as to aging it in the bottle? I would like to free up some of my carboys to start other batches, but the recipes seem to demand the wine set in the carboy for 3 to 4 months.
2) Working on a pear recipe. It directs me to stir the wine every 15 days post fermentation. Why would I do this? I thought the idea was for the wine to clear and to leave the lees on the bottom of the carboy so the clear wine can be racked off.
3) The wines I am working on, I have racked off more than the recipe calls for. I am concerned with the potassium metabisulfite level, and that it may be too low. Recipes call for that addition at the very end of the process closer to stabilization / bottling time. I did not want to try and tackle testing the metabisulfite levels yet. I had originally bought those test strips but found out they are not very accurate. If I wanted to test it correctly, I should get a basic lab set up. Seems complicated. My plan was to follow the recipes which seem to keep the metabisulfite level up via the author already working out the recipe (add 0.2g potassium metabisulfite at the end).
1) Once fermentation is done and the wine is clear, I assume this is just an aging process. What is the difference between aging it in the carboy as to aging it in the bottle? I would like to free up some of my carboys to start other batches, but the recipes seem to demand the wine set in the carboy for 3 to 4 months.
2) Working on a pear recipe. It directs me to stir the wine every 15 days post fermentation. Why would I do this? I thought the idea was for the wine to clear and to leave the lees on the bottom of the carboy so the clear wine can be racked off.
3) The wines I am working on, I have racked off more than the recipe calls for. I am concerned with the potassium metabisulfite level, and that it may be too low. Recipes call for that addition at the very end of the process closer to stabilization / bottling time. I did not want to try and tackle testing the metabisulfite levels yet. I had originally bought those test strips but found out they are not very accurate. If I wanted to test it correctly, I should get a basic lab set up. Seems complicated. My plan was to follow the recipes which seem to keep the metabisulfite level up via the author already working out the recipe (add 0.2g potassium metabisulfite at the end).