Cap Puncher
Senior Member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2021
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- 272
Did you use Prelude on these?We did 4 lugs of DeChaunac and another 6 of Steuben
Did you use Prelude on these?We did 4 lugs of DeChaunac and another 6 of Steuben
Did you have any sulfur smells? I just heard about that issue but have never experienced it before. I think adding some DAP part way through and maybe the beginning helps prevent it. I’ve always used yeast nutrients so maybe that’s why I’ve never experienced that.I didn't... I should have though...! I moved where I store them and totally forgot. I used RC212 on both. Very interestingly, the DeChaunac moved through fermentation quickly. The Steubens I cold soaked and then fermented, and their fermentation temperature remained cool and took a bit longer even in the same fermentation space.
Ditto! Mrs. WM81 hates the smell of fermentation -- I've got the windows in the wine area open and a fan running, so less "aroma" will waft upstairs.Looks and smells like a winery in the basement.
Very nice! I have about 250 lbs of my Chambourcin in a Brute, I pitched the yeast last night so I'm going to do the first punch down soon. I had the fruit flies under control until this morning. I'll post pictures of the must ASAP.
Ditto! Mrs. WM81 hates the smell of fermentation -- I've got the windows in the wine area open and a fan running, so less "aroma" will waft upstairs.
Dang! That looks beautiful!
Sounds like you’re having some fun over there Dave! RC212 is def legit. That bad rap is a moot point if using nutrients.I didn't smell any H2S.
I use a nutrient protocol on all my fermentations of GoFerm, Fermaid O, and K. They didn't need any DAP, which I would only use towards the end if needed. Actually, the gallon I pulled off from the Steubens as saignee for a rose got down to 1.010 and seemed to stall. I warmed it a little from 62 to 68 and that didn't help, so I added a small amount of DAP and it finished nicely. The remaining original amount finished on their own at 62. There was probably enough YAN in the must with the remaining grape skins.
Saignee is a common practice when you get fruit that lacks flavor and concentration it’s popular in the wine region I work in for the premium wines the cheaper wines don’t do it and are way less interesting or exciting and bland.Sounds like you’re having some fun over there Dave! RC212 is def legit. That bad rap is a moot point if using nutrients.
And those grapes….— I’ve honestly never once in my life heard of either of them before lol. But I certainly have heard of saigneé. And a sluggish rosé. Can’t say for sure but my theory is the juice lacks a ton of the nitrogen from little maceration time. I plan to use more nutrients for rosé in the future if not testing YAN.
But the later stage DAP is actually what compelled me to post. I’ve been under the impression that it’s the direct opposite of what you said. That once the abv reaches a certain point the DAP no longer helps the yeast but actually will feed the nasties instead b/c …. science. (*fact checkers-lookin your way!)
And thought Ferm-O is recommended if later stage nutrients are needed specifically b/c it lacks DAP. Now I may be completely wrong here and I can’t cite sources, but i committed it to memory so it must have come from somewhere lol.
Regardless though the wine gods were on your side. I’m glad to see everything worked out.
AJ I actually learned the saignee process from some of your posts so thank you! It makes complete sense that the rosé doesn’t have the necessary YAN, and I don’t have the means to test it, especially for such small runs. I just follow the nutrient protocol. Same with the other ferments to be honest.Sounds like you’re having some fun over there Dave! RC212 is def legit. That bad rap is a moot point if using nutrients.
And those grapes….— I’ve honestly never once in my life heard of either of them before lol. But I certainly have heard of saigneé. And a sluggish rosé. Can’t say for sure but my theory is the juice lacks a ton of the nitrogen from little maceration time. I plan to use more nutrients for rosé in the future if not testing YAN.
But the later stage DAP is actually what compelled me to post. I’ve been under the impression that it’s the direct opposite of what you said. That once the abv reaches a certain point the DAP no longer helps the yeast but actually will feed the nasties instead b/c …. science. (*fact checkers-lookin your way!)
And thought Ferm-O is recommended if later stage nutrients are needed specifically b/c it lacks DAP. Now I may be completely wrong here and I can’t cite sources, but i committed it to memory so it must have come from somewhere lol.
Regardless though the wine gods were on your side. I’m glad to see everything worked out.
Yes indeed! I’ve been gathering things little by little, here and there, to make the process easier and better. Everything but the pump has been second or third hand. I do love a good DIY and have made a press previously, which worked really well but it was fairly big and cumbersome to move around. I even looked into making a crusher destemmer, a move up from a manual crusher I have, which was a move up from a milk-crate in a bin. Those things are just fabulous.I'm loving the pictures of grapes and gear in this thread, it's particularly interesting to see so many grapes that are so different from what I'm used to ( = mostly Pinot Noir).
And @David Violante it looks like we have very similar equipment - hand crank destemmer with stainless hopper, #30 (?) stainless basket press and one of those little transfer pumps.
My son & I finished pressing our large batches and I'm chilling. You REALLY made my day!Not crush, but today was press day for our Chambourcin grapes. I've never had such a sloppy mess in 10 years of wine making. I did add pectin enzyme to the must prior to fermentation. I'm pretty sure I have always done that. Maybe it was that the grapes were on the vine an extra week from when they were ready to pick, due to being out of town.
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