David Lewis
Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2019
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 27
Ok, so I need some help here identifying an off taste from several of my wines. I hope that I can fix the batches that have not been bottled but at the very least learn what can be done to not get this odd taste in future batches. Here is what I have made and what I am running up against.
Issue: 3 out of 5 batches of wine over the past two years have an off taste. I know taste is hard to describe, so Ill do my best. The wines have good initial and mid taste but have an atrocious finish. In some ways it reminds me of a wine that was aged in a bourbon barrel. The flavor is deep and dark but not very good. After that I am struggling to provide a better description.
Batches:
2018 - Cab and Cab Franc. Grapes were from Columbia valley on new vines. D80 was used for the Cab Franc and the cab was fermented in two separate batches. One with D80 and one with D254. Wines were oaked in Mediam French Cubes. Tannin Riche extra was used prior to bottling. All wines went through MLF.
2019
- All wines went through MLF
- Cab was from Walla Walla. The grapes were fermented in two separate batches. One with D80 and one with D254. American Oak cubes. This wine is a little on the light side but does not have any aftertaste issues. It general it is a decent wine.
- Syrah - Columbia Valley - The grapes came in with a very high brix but an OK PH. It was watered back with water and tartaric acid to bring the brix down to 25. D80 yeast. American Oak cubes. - This wine's acid is off ( I likely did something stupid on my tartaric acid additions) and it has the bad aftertaste mentioned above.
- Petite Verdot - Columbia Valley, same vineyard that produced the grapes used in the 2018 batches - D254 Yeast. Aged with American oak staves. This wine is slightly more acidic that I would prefer but is darn good.
Out best guesses:
- Over oaked - Possible but I feel like over oaking would not give this taste.
- Pressed to hard and released bad tasting tannins from the seeds. Again, possible. But we knew of our faults from the first batch and were cognizant of not over pressing (at least I thought we were) .
- Too many stems - Possible as these were destemmed at the vineyard but there wasnt an over abundance of stems.
- Water Supply - Any water from batch 1 was tap water (cleaning, yeast starter, etc). For batch 2 we used distilled or spring water (Cant find my notes on that)
- Clueless wine makers - very possible indeed
Ideas, Suggestions, Comments, More info needed?
Thanks for the help!!!!!
Issue: 3 out of 5 batches of wine over the past two years have an off taste. I know taste is hard to describe, so Ill do my best. The wines have good initial and mid taste but have an atrocious finish. In some ways it reminds me of a wine that was aged in a bourbon barrel. The flavor is deep and dark but not very good. After that I am struggling to provide a better description.
Batches:
2018 - Cab and Cab Franc. Grapes were from Columbia valley on new vines. D80 was used for the Cab Franc and the cab was fermented in two separate batches. One with D80 and one with D254. Wines were oaked in Mediam French Cubes. Tannin Riche extra was used prior to bottling. All wines went through MLF.
2019
- All wines went through MLF
- Cab was from Walla Walla. The grapes were fermented in two separate batches. One with D80 and one with D254. American Oak cubes. This wine is a little on the light side but does not have any aftertaste issues. It general it is a decent wine.
- Syrah - Columbia Valley - The grapes came in with a very high brix but an OK PH. It was watered back with water and tartaric acid to bring the brix down to 25. D80 yeast. American Oak cubes. - This wine's acid is off ( I likely did something stupid on my tartaric acid additions) and it has the bad aftertaste mentioned above.
- Petite Verdot - Columbia Valley, same vineyard that produced the grapes used in the 2018 batches - D254 Yeast. Aged with American oak staves. This wine is slightly more acidic that I would prefer but is darn good.
Out best guesses:
- Over oaked - Possible but I feel like over oaking would not give this taste.
- Pressed to hard and released bad tasting tannins from the seeds. Again, possible. But we knew of our faults from the first batch and were cognizant of not over pressing (at least I thought we were) .
- Too many stems - Possible as these were destemmed at the vineyard but there wasnt an over abundance of stems.
- Water Supply - Any water from batch 1 was tap water (cleaning, yeast starter, etc). For batch 2 we used distilled or spring water (Cant find my notes on that)
- Clueless wine makers - very possible indeed
Ideas, Suggestions, Comments, More info needed?
Thanks for the help!!!!!