Such hostility...... makes me want to chime in. My opinion is that we need to pay attention to both, not operate in a vacuum clueless or ignorant about either pH or TA.
Prefermentation, when we should try to make our major adjustments to the must, we wouldn’t adjust the TA upward or downward to the detriment of making the pH too low to support good fermentation, nor so high as to jeopardize the microbial integrity of the must, balance is the key here. Do it well, and you make a wine with pH and TA generally within, or near the parameters we strive for.
Postfermentation, we still need to evaluate and understand both TA and pH together, for though their relationship isn’t linear, they do play off of one another. pH knowledge will help you evaluate the microbial stability, aging potential, etc. of our wine over the long haul, and TA, the taste perception of the acid in our wine. Taste at this stage of the game, and in my book, trumps most other considerations, as long as the pH is relatively in range.
For anyone to say “ignore one and focus on the other” at either stage seems overly simplistic. Personally, my red must adjustment efforts are: “Shoot for pH 3.5 while maintaining TA in the 6 - 7 range”, or “Shoot for TA of 6.5, while maintaining pH in the 3.4 - 3.6 range”. Doesn’t always work out that way, I’d rather end up on the low acid side because it’s so easy to raise later, as opposed to de-acidifying. With finished wine, acid adjustments are made to taste, though we should still endeavor to know what the numbers are. When the taste is optimized through bench trials, and the resultant pH is in range, a proper sulfite management protocol takes us the rest of the way home.
Just my two cents.........
Prefermentation, when we should try to make our major adjustments to the must, we wouldn’t adjust the TA upward or downward to the detriment of making the pH too low to support good fermentation, nor so high as to jeopardize the microbial integrity of the must, balance is the key here. Do it well, and you make a wine with pH and TA generally within, or near the parameters we strive for.
Postfermentation, we still need to evaluate and understand both TA and pH together, for though their relationship isn’t linear, they do play off of one another. pH knowledge will help you evaluate the microbial stability, aging potential, etc. of our wine over the long haul, and TA, the taste perception of the acid in our wine. Taste at this stage of the game, and in my book, trumps most other considerations, as long as the pH is relatively in range.
For anyone to say “ignore one and focus on the other” at either stage seems overly simplistic. Personally, my red must adjustment efforts are: “Shoot for pH 3.5 while maintaining TA in the 6 - 7 range”, or “Shoot for TA of 6.5, while maintaining pH in the 3.4 - 3.6 range”. Doesn’t always work out that way, I’d rather end up on the low acid side because it’s so easy to raise later, as opposed to de-acidifying. With finished wine, acid adjustments are made to taste, though we should still endeavor to know what the numbers are. When the taste is optimized through bench trials, and the resultant pH is in range, a proper sulfite management protocol takes us the rest of the way home.
Just my two cents.........