I'm in the habit of pouring the liquid left in the bottom of the fermenter into a tall bottle, putting it in the refrigerator, and letting it clear. It's amazing how much wine is saved doing this.
Last weekend I racked a Winexpert Australian Chardonnay kit, and poured the remainder into a bottle, which produced this:
Pretty ugly, isn't it???
The bottle went into the refrigerator, and five days later I have this:
The cloudiness visible on the top part is condensation.
I carefully siphoned the wine off the (rather loose) sediment, and put the wine in a clean 375 ml screw cap bottle. I will keep this separate and taste it in a few weeks. If it's fine, I'll use it for topup. Note -- I've never had a problem doing this, but keep the wine separate due to paranoia.
Last spring I racked a 54 liter barrel, capturing 1.5 liters of sludge. A week later the lees compacted to 1", so I recovered almost a full 2 bottles of wine. This wine was HIGHLY oaked and undrinkable (I had added 6 oz French oak cubes to a neutral barrel) as the wine closest to the cubes was the most heavily oaked. I later used the recovered wine to top the barrel, and that over-the-top oakiness distributed nicely in the wine, producing a happy result.
Last weekend I racked a Winexpert Australian Chardonnay kit, and poured the remainder into a bottle, which produced this:
Pretty ugly, isn't it???
The bottle went into the refrigerator, and five days later I have this:
The cloudiness visible on the top part is condensation.
I carefully siphoned the wine off the (rather loose) sediment, and put the wine in a clean 375 ml screw cap bottle. I will keep this separate and taste it in a few weeks. If it's fine, I'll use it for topup. Note -- I've never had a problem doing this, but keep the wine separate due to paranoia.
Last spring I racked a 54 liter barrel, capturing 1.5 liters of sludge. A week later the lees compacted to 1", so I recovered almost a full 2 bottles of wine. This wine was HIGHLY oaked and undrinkable (I had added 6 oz French oak cubes to a neutral barrel) as the wine closest to the cubes was the most heavily oaked. I later used the recovered wine to top the barrel, and that over-the-top oakiness distributed nicely in the wine, producing a happy result.