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I've seen conflicting amounts before bottling. As much as 3.75 tsp. per 5 gallons and as little as 2.5 tsp. What is common?
Thanks
BV
Thanks
BV
Should it be added at the time of bottling or before?If your container has directions - follow that. It might be a variation in the strength what you purchased. My last bottle says .25 tsp per gallon.
Should it be added at the time of bottling or before?
Great.....thanks.You can add it and kmeta when bottling. Just make sure it's completely dissolved and give the wine a gentle stir so it's distributed.
I should be more specific. Two weeks ago I bottled a cabernet from my September 2019 batch. I racked three or four times and made a couple of potassium metabisulphite additions over the months. I tried a bottle yesterday and there was a very slight fizz in the background. After looking at my notes I realized I did not add potassium sorbate. The wine fermented down to .996 so I’m not sure how this apparent re-fermentation started. What is the best way to handle this? Uncork, pour into a bucket and add re-hydrated potassium sorbate. Or can I uncork and add it dry to each bottle> Thanks.
I should be more specific. Two weeks ago I bottled a cabernet from my September 2019 batch. I racked three or four times and made a couple of potassium metabisulphite additions over the months. I tried a bottle yesterday and there was a very slight fizz in the background. After looking at my notes I realized I did not add potassium sorbate. The wine fermented down to .996 so I’m not sure how this apparent re-fermentation started. What is the best way to handle this? Uncork, pour into a bucket and add re-hydrated potassium sorbate? Or can I add dry potassium sorbate to each bottle. Thanks.
degassing never occurred to me because I do that with a wine whip for about 30 minutes when fermentation is complete. Having said that how would you proceed from here.
Open each bottle and pour roughly into a decanter, then swish and swirl. Let sit about 30-45 minutes prior to drinking. That time is a SWAG, heavy on the guess.
@cmason1957 is on the right track with residual CO2. Whipping for 30 minutes isn't likely to remove all of the CO2 in the wine, time and temp are your best weapons. Allowing your wine to sit under airlock in a carboy or similar vessel for 9 - 12 months seems to always do the trick.
If you have an All-In-One Wine Pump or other mechanical vacuum degassing tool, you can speed up the process considerably and effectively. With the AIO, just a few rackings under vacuum plus a little time seems to always do the trick.
The wine was in bulk under an airlock for 8 months. Never had this issue before.
That time is a SWAG, heavy on the guess. I'm sorry but I don't understand your last sentence.
personal preference, I avoid sorbate and try to age all wines at least 9 months, ,,, to starve off the yeast.I've seen conflicting amounts before bottling. As much as 3.75 tsp. per 5 gallons and as little as 2.5 tsp. What is common?
SWAG = "scientific, wild-assed guess." "Heavy on the guess" means that time frame is very uncertain.
Yes I did top off with commercial wines@wineview By any chance did you top up with commercial wine after any of the past rackings? Residual sugar common in some commercial wines can cause slight co2 problems like this in bottled wine. I agree with the other comments above that residual co2 from inadequate degassing is probably the most likely cause, but just wanted to point out other possibilities.
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