windseafire
Member
I like really dry wines so would like to ferment out as much sugar as possible. When I transfer from primary to secondary, do I have to add sorbate and k-meta or could I just let any residual fermentation continue?
I should have added that this was in relation to a fine wine making kit that had undergone 10 days of extended maceration after it got to 1.010.I like really dry wines so would like to ferment out as much sugar as possible. When I transfer from primary to secondary, do I have to add sorbate and k-meta or could I just let any residual fermentation continue?
Certainly rack now and add the appropriate amount of Kmeta. Sorbate now is not required, and if you bulk age it for greater than 9 months, you may never need it, unless back sweetening later.I should have added that this was in relation to a fine wine making kit that had undergone 10 days of extended maceration after it got to 1.010.
Interesting, I didn't realize that the kmeta just stunned the yeast. Thanks for the Info!Certainly rack now and add the appropriate amount of Kmeta. Sorbate now is not required, and if you bulk age it for greater than 9 months, you may never need it, unless back sweetening later.
Kmeta does not kill yeast, might slow it down. Kmeta will kill bacteria, and help foster lees dropping out.
Except in high concentrations, K-meta may have little to no effect upon commercial yeast, which is selected for K-meta tolerance. OTOH, wild yeast and other microorganisms will be killed and/or stunted.Interesting, I didn't realize that the kmeta just stunned the yeast. Thanks for the Info!
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