pete1325
Senior Member
Just curious to know how many stir during primary fermentation and if so how often?
@pete1325,
For whites from grapes I no longer stir. I ferment cool (using ice packs and water bath), removing the lid only to add bentonite and nutrient and to check the SG. My whites are better since I adopted this regimen.
This is due to the cooler slower fermentation correct? I read that in one of my winemaking books. Reds can benefit from warmer shorter fermentation and whites to longer cooler fermentation.
That said, I heard that fermenting whites in this fashion can provoke stalled fermentation in some cases, but I suppose you can take precautions to prevent that.
Correct. I don't seriously cool it down until end of lag phase, and then when it gets down around 1.020 or so, by design (or perhaps because I'm tired of changing ice packs every 4-6 hours) I let it drift up to be sure it finishes. Usually it goes into the carboy around 1.010 anyway.
I have bought all the components for an Arduino controlled peltier cooler to make this more precise, but I'm going to have to wait until bear cub #1, the engineer, comes home at Christmas to help me build and program it.
Correct. I don't seriously cool it down until end of lag phase, and then when it gets down around 1.020 or so, by design (or perhaps because I'm tired of changing ice packs every 4-6 hours) I let it drift up to be sure it finishes. Usually it goes into the carboy around 1.010 anyway.
I have bought all the components for an Arduino controlled peltier cooler to make this more precise, but I'm going to have to wait until bear cub #1, the engineer, comes home at Christmas to help me build and program it.
Being an amateur Brewer (as well as winemaker) I have a dedicated temperature controlled fridge. When I am brewing a lager or Belgian or making a white wine, just set the temp and walk away. Cost nothing for the fridge and 30$ for the temp controller.
I just read up on Peltier coolers. How do you plan on applying it to your wine? Some sort of insulated enclosure? What materials are you planning on using? I'm very intrigued and would like something a little more controlled than the frozen water bottle dance.Correct. I don't seriously cool it down until end of lag phase, and then when it gets down around 1.020 or so, by design (or perhaps because I'm tired of changing ice packs every 4-6 hours) I let it drift up to be sure it finishes. Usually it goes into the carboy around 1.010 anyway.
I have bought all the components for an Arduino controlled peltier cooler to make this more precise, but I'm going to have to wait until bear cub #1, the engineer, comes home at Christmas to help me build and program it.
The fermentation process requires oxygen.
It is true that aerating or oxygenating wort is generally beneficial to fermentation, but it is untrue to say that yeast requires oxygen to reproduce or that yeast uses oxygen to respire during fermentation. The misunderstanding may be subtle, but it is a misunderstanding nonetheless. Gaining a clear understanding of the truth about how yeast works not only sets us on sound technical foundations, but has practical applications as well.
FWIIW, from "The Biochemistry of Yeast":
I just read up on Peltier coolers. How do you plan on applying it to your wine? Some sort of insulated enclosure? What materials are you planning on using? I'm very intrigued and would like something a little more controlled than the frozen water bottle dance.
As far as the need to stir a must with no skins once fermentation is started, it doesn't seem to me to be a necessity, nor will it hurt anything when CO2 is being generated. I like to play in the wine, so I stir sometimes.
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