clent724
Junior
Hi. My name is Cody and I'm in SW Pennsylvania. Last fall I made my first batch from grapes, a cab/syrah blend from California. Until that point I've only done fresh juice buckets and never balanced acid or pH and they've turned out drinkable. I want to step my game up so recently invested a lot in equipment. The cab/syrah is very sharp so I tested the TA. It is .79 and the pH is 3.60. It is currently in a 27 gallon bourbon barrel. I dosed with vp41 at the end of fermentation and did verify on a chromatography test that it completed (I'll attach a pic). After doing a lot of reading, I realize that the pH is very close to the magic number of 3.65. I'm worried that if I treat with potassium carbonate or bicarbonate it would raise the pH above 3.65 and will increase even further after cold stabilization. Should I cold stabilize first, re-test and see if it then needs carbonate or bicarbonate added? I assume I would have to cold stabilize a 2nd time after that to drop out the potassium? Also, is carbonate or bicarbonate better with acid this high?
I'm unsure what to do and surely don't want to ruin the batch. I'm a newbie but have a deep interest in winemaking. It's a great hobby and I want to make the best wine that I can. Something I'm proud to share with friends and family.
I'll be crushing 22 boxes of Lanza Barbera when they arrive down Pittsburgh, within the next week it looks like. Now that I have testing equipment I have very high hopes. Very exciting.
I'm unsure what to do and surely don't want to ruin the batch. I'm a newbie but have a deep interest in winemaking. It's a great hobby and I want to make the best wine that I can. Something I'm proud to share with friends and family.
I'll be crushing 22 boxes of Lanza Barbera when they arrive down Pittsburgh, within the next week it looks like. Now that I have testing equipment I have very high hopes. Very exciting.