Hello,
I am new to winemaking and found myself with 80+ pounds of yellow plums about to rot away about 40 days ago.
I got some bad winemaking advice and unclear recipe instruction, combined with lack of supplies, lack of knowledge and general panic.
The recipie I used had the following proportions that I multiplied for my plumb haul:
5kg (11lbs) plums,
3kg (6.6lbs) sugar,
4Litres (1.06gallon) water.
This is what I have done:
21 august: cleaning and sterilizing buckets and equipment, crushing the fruit and adding water but did not add any sugar. I did also not use any sulfides!
22 august: Started fermentation using bread yeast (yes, I know, very bad advice...) Airlocks installed in lids
Did not have a hydrometer yet so starting gravity unknown.
Punched down the caps and stirred the buckets daily for first few days, with good yeast activity.
Bubbles stopped after a couple days, as I hadn't added the sugar.
25-26 august: Added only 30% of the total sugarwater from recipie, as I was still waiting for supplies to arrive. I was thinking I could "delay" things this way but not wanting to stall fermentation completely either.
30 august: Pressed and "filtered" the wine trough cheesecloth. Thus also racking it off the sediment in the process. Back into buckets as carboys still had not arrived.
Added All the remaining 70% of the sugar water solution.
Added high alcohol wine yeast and yeast nutrient that had now arrived.
I dissolved the wine yeast in water with appropriate temperature but did not let it sit for very long (maybe an 30-60 minutes) before adding it to the wine. There was about 3-4 inches of headspace (!) in the buckets. Airlock activity started again somewhat.
11 sept: Carboys arrived so I finally racked to them. Wrong headspace so I had to top up with some water. (about 5% water compared to the wines total volume)
So the wine has been in the carboys for over 20 days now.
I took some hydrometer measurements today: 2 of my 6 gallon carboys are sitting at 62 and 65.
So I seem to be stuck, there is some very minor airlock activity, but this wine may take forever to finish.
I realize that the measurement may have been affected by CO2 bubbles in the wine, since I took the measurement directly inside the carboy.
I may need to re-measure outside of the carboys where I can stir the CO2 out.
Had reasonable temps in the room the entire time of fermentation: 23-28 Celsius. (73-83 Fahrenheit)
I am trying to figure out what caused the stall. I think the wine yeast may have failed to multiply because of being outnumbered by the existing bread yeast, while the bread yeast may then have failed because of alcohol level.
Maybe I killed the wine yeast by shock from adding it too quickly to the wine?
So I have been thinking of making a starter with the last bag of high alcohol wine yeast that I have and add that to one of the carboys to see if it comes alive. (Risk of excessive foam going in the airlock with this much sugar content?)
But I dont have a clue at this point...
Any ideas will be greatly appreciated!
I am new to winemaking and found myself with 80+ pounds of yellow plums about to rot away about 40 days ago.
I got some bad winemaking advice and unclear recipe instruction, combined with lack of supplies, lack of knowledge and general panic.
The recipie I used had the following proportions that I multiplied for my plumb haul:
5kg (11lbs) plums,
3kg (6.6lbs) sugar,
4Litres (1.06gallon) water.
This is what I have done:
21 august: cleaning and sterilizing buckets and equipment, crushing the fruit and adding water but did not add any sugar. I did also not use any sulfides!
22 august: Started fermentation using bread yeast (yes, I know, very bad advice...) Airlocks installed in lids
Did not have a hydrometer yet so starting gravity unknown.
Punched down the caps and stirred the buckets daily for first few days, with good yeast activity.
Bubbles stopped after a couple days, as I hadn't added the sugar.
25-26 august: Added only 30% of the total sugarwater from recipie, as I was still waiting for supplies to arrive. I was thinking I could "delay" things this way but not wanting to stall fermentation completely either.
30 august: Pressed and "filtered" the wine trough cheesecloth. Thus also racking it off the sediment in the process. Back into buckets as carboys still had not arrived.
Added All the remaining 70% of the sugar water solution.
Added high alcohol wine yeast and yeast nutrient that had now arrived.
I dissolved the wine yeast in water with appropriate temperature but did not let it sit for very long (maybe an 30-60 minutes) before adding it to the wine. There was about 3-4 inches of headspace (!) in the buckets. Airlock activity started again somewhat.
11 sept: Carboys arrived so I finally racked to them. Wrong headspace so I had to top up with some water. (about 5% water compared to the wines total volume)
So the wine has been in the carboys for over 20 days now.
I took some hydrometer measurements today: 2 of my 6 gallon carboys are sitting at 62 and 65.
So I seem to be stuck, there is some very minor airlock activity, but this wine may take forever to finish.
I realize that the measurement may have been affected by CO2 bubbles in the wine, since I took the measurement directly inside the carboy.
I may need to re-measure outside of the carboys where I can stir the CO2 out.
Had reasonable temps in the room the entire time of fermentation: 23-28 Celsius. (73-83 Fahrenheit)
I am trying to figure out what caused the stall. I think the wine yeast may have failed to multiply because of being outnumbered by the existing bread yeast, while the bread yeast may then have failed because of alcohol level.
Maybe I killed the wine yeast by shock from adding it too quickly to the wine?
So I have been thinking of making a starter with the last bag of high alcohol wine yeast that I have and add that to one of the carboys to see if it comes alive. (Risk of excessive foam going in the airlock with this much sugar content?)
But I dont have a clue at this point...
Any ideas will be greatly appreciated!
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