jgmann67
Rennaisance Man
I just got a soda stream and am mastering the art of carbonating my wine without blowing too much out in foam. And, it tastes pretty spectacular. So this has me thinking about ways to carbonate and bottle the wine for later.
I saw a video using a pony keg, charging it with co2 and then using a fitting to fill the bottle without too much foam. But, the guy carbonated the wine to 12 or 13 PSI.
Given that champagne typically has about 90 PSI, I’m wondering how long a 15 PSI wine will hold over time. Actually, I’m wondering a lot of things:
How hard is it to use the old method of champagne (in bottle carbonation)? How much CO2 will I get? Will the wine be clear? So many questions.
I saw a video using a pony keg, charging it with co2 and then using a fitting to fill the bottle without too much foam. But, the guy carbonated the wine to 12 or 13 PSI.
Given that champagne typically has about 90 PSI, I’m wondering how long a 15 PSI wine will hold over time. Actually, I’m wondering a lot of things:
How hard is it to use the old method of champagne (in bottle carbonation)? How much CO2 will I get? Will the wine be clear? So many questions.