reeflections
Senior Member
Thanks for all the responses.
In my ongoing experiment I started a sugar water starter which took off well and I added a cup of the wine in question and it seems to have halted. Too early to tell for sure so I will continue to watch it.
But honestly, I'm getting tired of dealing with all the possibilities. Since it tastes good, I think I will move on and be sure to sorbate it before bottling.
Thanks!
I did let the packets of EC1118 reach room temp before pitching.
Thanks!
I usually wait 24 hours before pitching. In this case, because of the acid issues, I waited 12 hours after adding most acid to be sure it was blending. Then added more acid and waited 24 hrs before testing pH again and pitching the yeast.
Thanks!
I don't have a heater belt but I did raise the room temp considerably so the wine is next to the heater vent and has been about 75 degrees for a few days.
I like the winemaker's quote. I also have come to the conclusion of your last paragraph. Positive thinking!
Thanks!
I guess that's a possibility. It was labeled L D Carlson and I bought it 8 months ago from Label Peelers and store it in a cool dry spot in a canning jar. Does it go bad? It was working fine in previous batches up until just 10 days before I started this batch.
I'm getting ready to start a batch of tart cherry. I'll see how it does with it. I don't know any other way to test it.
It makes sense, to me anyway, that tart cherry would be more acidic to start with than the sweet.
In my ongoing experiment I started a sugar water starter which took off well and I added a cup of the wine in question and it seems to have halted. Too early to tell for sure so I will continue to watch it.
But honestly, I'm getting tired of dealing with all the possibilities. Since it tastes good, I think I will move on and be sure to sorbate it before bottling.
I have had issues if my yeast is cold when pitching (MLB too) so I'd pitch another EC1118 that's at room temperature.
Thanks!
I did let the packets of EC1118 reach room temp before pitching.
20/20 hindsight here but I would try to make sure that you give any batch an overnight rest before pitching the yeast. In other words, get things where you want them as far as pH, SG, and Volume, then let it sit overnight before pitching the yeast. You may have be doing this already {snip}
Thanks!
I usually wait 24 hours before pitching. In this case, because of the acid issues, I waited 12 hours after adding most acid to be sure it was blending. Then added more acid and waited 24 hrs before testing pH again and pitching the yeast.
@reeflections, heat the wine. A temperature of 68 to 72 F is generally good, but if the yeast is not eating, a boost may help. Put it in a warmer place, around 80 F, or use a heater belt. That may help.
As for why? Sorry, but as the wise old owl said, "The world may never know." Yeast is a living organism and it's going to react to the factors of its environment and do its own thing. We don't necessarily know or understand all those factors.
A commercial winemaker told me (this is a paraphrase): "We don't make wine. It makes itself. We do our best to guide it."
Sometimes we do everything right and the wine doesn't cooperate. In this case, the wine may be sweeter than you want, but if it doesn't ferment further, you will still have a wine that can be enjoyed. Count this as a victory. Positive thinking!
Thanks!
I don't have a heater belt but I did raise the room temp considerably so the wine is next to the heater vent and has been about 75 degrees for a few days.
I like the winemaker's quote. I also have come to the conclusion of your last paragraph. Positive thinking!
Could there be something wrong with your acid blend?
Thanks!
I guess that's a possibility. It was labeled L D Carlson and I bought it 8 months ago from Label Peelers and store it in a cool dry spot in a canning jar. Does it go bad? It was working fine in previous batches up until just 10 days before I started this batch.
I'm getting ready to start a batch of tart cherry. I'll see how it does with it. I don't know any other way to test it.
It makes sense, to me anyway, that tart cherry would be more acidic to start with than the sweet.