I thought about posting this in the recent Back Sweetening thread, but figured it was sufficiently distinct to warrant a new topic...
What is your timing for addition of sugar and sorbate when you're back-sweetening wine? I am about to bottle my first white wines, and although I'm happy with how they taste I think they need a little sugar to balance the (pH 3.2, TA 8.4g/L) acidity. Fermentation ended 10/9/22, so currently at about the 6-month mark in bulk aging.
In the section on sorbate addition, Daniel Pambianchi's 'Modern Home Winemaking' includes the direction to 'Wait at least 2 weeks before and after sweetening'. I take this to mean (i) add sorbate, (ii) 2 weeks later, if no sign of sedimentation add sugar then (iii) 2 weeks later, if no signs of sedimentation and/or refermentation, bottle.
Curious to know if this is what other folk do? I've seen other recommendations that suggest to simply add sorbate, sugar and SO2 immediately prior to bottling. It seems to me that there's at least some rationale for doing sorbate first (inhibit yeast reactivation prior to sugar).
What is your timing for addition of sugar and sorbate when you're back-sweetening wine? I am about to bottle my first white wines, and although I'm happy with how they taste I think they need a little sugar to balance the (pH 3.2, TA 8.4g/L) acidity. Fermentation ended 10/9/22, so currently at about the 6-month mark in bulk aging.
In the section on sorbate addition, Daniel Pambianchi's 'Modern Home Winemaking' includes the direction to 'Wait at least 2 weeks before and after sweetening'. I take this to mean (i) add sorbate, (ii) 2 weeks later, if no sign of sedimentation add sugar then (iii) 2 weeks later, if no signs of sedimentation and/or refermentation, bottle.
Curious to know if this is what other folk do? I've seen other recommendations that suggest to simply add sorbate, sugar and SO2 immediately prior to bottling. It seems to me that there's at least some rationale for doing sorbate first (inhibit yeast reactivation prior to sugar).