I read this statement from Masta in other post, that made me think.<?amespace prefix = o ns = "urnchemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" />
http://www.finevinewines.com/Wiz/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=1 048&PN=1
“Primary Fermentation is actually Aerobic fermentation: Which means fermentation in the presence of oxygen. This stage is important to build a large colony of viable yeast cells to guarantee all the sugar in your must can be consumed and converted into CO2 and ethanol.
Secondary Fermentation is actually Anaerobic fermentation: Which is fermentation without the presence of oxygen. This stage is important so the yeast can concentrate on converting the sugar to CO2 and ethanol and not multiplying.
Only microbes, such as yeasts and bacteria, can live for long periods without oxygen. The main reasons to put the wine under airlock in a secondary fermenter is to prevent any chance of oxidation when the fermentation slows and the amount of CO2that isproduced diminishes. It also allows the yeast to concentrate on feeding on the remaining sugar so you get a completefermentation or conversion to CO2 and ethanol.”
I started a Viognier Kit and blackberry wine.
- For the Viognier Kit I racked the wine when SG was at 1.016 the day before it was 1.026 with a temp of 18 Celsius so the fermentation was going fast, if I understand there was a lot of a yeast cell. And that the instruction asks for to get to 28 Days.
- For the blackberry wine it said to rack the wine to the carboy after 5 to 7 days of primary fermentation. The SG was at 1.070 not 1.020, but the carboy was filled at about 5 “from airlock. So I know there was a bit of air but not like in the primary fermanter. If I understand the colonisation of yeast was slowdown that means slower fermentation. After 30 days now the SG is 1.026 at temp of 18 Celsius same temperatures than the viognier kit. I tasted it and it is very good.
I learned that a slow fermentation would keep more aromas from the fruit.
I always try to improve my wine kit lower temperature, more time in carboy …
But what about racking the wine kit before 1.020 to slowdown yeast cells production. Is less yeast cells would slowdown the fermentation like the blackberry and make it better?
http://www.finevinewines.com/Wiz/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=1 048&PN=1
“Primary Fermentation is actually Aerobic fermentation: Which means fermentation in the presence of oxygen. This stage is important to build a large colony of viable yeast cells to guarantee all the sugar in your must can be consumed and converted into CO2 and ethanol.
Secondary Fermentation is actually Anaerobic fermentation: Which is fermentation without the presence of oxygen. This stage is important so the yeast can concentrate on converting the sugar to CO2 and ethanol and not multiplying.
Only microbes, such as yeasts and bacteria, can live for long periods without oxygen. The main reasons to put the wine under airlock in a secondary fermenter is to prevent any chance of oxidation when the fermentation slows and the amount of CO2that isproduced diminishes. It also allows the yeast to concentrate on feeding on the remaining sugar so you get a completefermentation or conversion to CO2 and ethanol.”
I started a Viognier Kit and blackberry wine.
- For the Viognier Kit I racked the wine when SG was at 1.016 the day before it was 1.026 with a temp of 18 Celsius so the fermentation was going fast, if I understand there was a lot of a yeast cell. And that the instruction asks for to get to 28 Days.
- For the blackberry wine it said to rack the wine to the carboy after 5 to 7 days of primary fermentation. The SG was at 1.070 not 1.020, but the carboy was filled at about 5 “from airlock. So I know there was a bit of air but not like in the primary fermanter. If I understand the colonisation of yeast was slowdown that means slower fermentation. After 30 days now the SG is 1.026 at temp of 18 Celsius same temperatures than the viognier kit. I tasted it and it is very good.
I learned that a slow fermentation would keep more aromas from the fruit.
I always try to improve my wine kit lower temperature, more time in carboy …
But what about racking the wine kit before 1.020 to slowdown yeast cells production. Is less yeast cells would slowdown the fermentation like the blackberry and make it better?