I’ll be making another Concord wine from concentrate soon and I’ve been considering using K-bicarbonate to lower the T.A. of the must, but I am not sure of the procedure.
Typically northern grown grapes like Concord are a little high in acidity and low in sugar. The traditional method of dealing with this combination of problems is to add water to dilute the acidity, and add sugar to boost the gravity.
Since I’ll be starting with pure unadulterated Concord juice concentrate of 68 brix, I want to dilute the concentrate to somewhere around 1.090 or 1.095 so that all of the fermentables will come from the grape juice. I believe this will result in a fuller flavored wine (typical Concord grape juice comes in around 1.067 gravity).
One method I could use would be to ferment the wine and then cold condition it for a few weeks and rack off the tartrate precipitate, but I don’t have the refrigerator capacity to do this, and although it will be cold enough here next month to cold condition in my garage, the temperature fluctuates too much for that to be a good option.
I’ve read that K-bicarbonate could be used to treat the wine after it’s fermented but you risk losing some fruity aroma/flavor from the fizzing off that would result from the treatment.
The couple of papers I’ve read on the subject recommended treating the must instead, prior to fermentation, but both talked about letting the “wine” (they both switched from talking about must to talking about wine) sit for a few weeks in cold storage before racking off of the tartrate.
So, not much help to me.
I’m wondering if I can just treat the must with the K-bicarb and proceed with the fermentation and hopefully if there are tartrate crystals to be concerned about they will settle out with the yeast at the end of fermentation.
Any thoughts? Thanks!
Typically northern grown grapes like Concord are a little high in acidity and low in sugar. The traditional method of dealing with this combination of problems is to add water to dilute the acidity, and add sugar to boost the gravity.
Since I’ll be starting with pure unadulterated Concord juice concentrate of 68 brix, I want to dilute the concentrate to somewhere around 1.090 or 1.095 so that all of the fermentables will come from the grape juice. I believe this will result in a fuller flavored wine (typical Concord grape juice comes in around 1.067 gravity).
One method I could use would be to ferment the wine and then cold condition it for a few weeks and rack off the tartrate precipitate, but I don’t have the refrigerator capacity to do this, and although it will be cold enough here next month to cold condition in my garage, the temperature fluctuates too much for that to be a good option.
I’ve read that K-bicarbonate could be used to treat the wine after it’s fermented but you risk losing some fruity aroma/flavor from the fizzing off that would result from the treatment.
The couple of papers I’ve read on the subject recommended treating the must instead, prior to fermentation, but both talked about letting the “wine” (they both switched from talking about must to talking about wine) sit for a few weeks in cold storage before racking off of the tartrate.
So, not much help to me.
I’m wondering if I can just treat the must with the K-bicarb and proceed with the fermentation and hopefully if there are tartrate crystals to be concerned about they will settle out with the yeast at the end of fermentation.
Any thoughts? Thanks!