Hello everyone!
New to the forum and very new to wine making, loving it so far.
I have gotten started with kits for wine, and real honey for meads. Liking the results so far and I have started doing a little bit of experimentation to see what I like, what I don't like and how yeast behaves.
Have an issue/question that I was not able to find on the forum, or online.
I have tried an experiment where I pitched a top fermenting yeast into a white wine. Before when I used bottom, it was a very straight forward process, nothing complicated. Now that I have tried top fermenting I have had an interesting experience....I have let the wine ferment for about 10 days, and at this point I would do secondary fermentation with gravity being about .0994 with very low airlock activity...... but this time it was sitting about 1.018 and was still very sweet......that said, fermentation was very active to the point where it would spill out of the airlock for a better part of 3 days of nonstop action.
My questions are :
- I am thinking about pitching in bottom fermenting yeast (as I am more familiar with it, I guess) to give a boost to the fermentation and try and bring down the gravity, pushing the wine into the dry territory. I have read that mixing yeast is technically not bad, but it makes me wonder what could have caused this type of active yet low yielding fermentation?
- Should I simply leave the wine to ferment longer, even-though the activity has slowed way down? (I get a bubble every maybe 10 seconds, making 25L / approx 6.5 Gallons) Is this typical of top fermenting yeast?
- Perhaps there are some variables I have not considered?
- Due to it being top fermenting yeast, could it simply have pushed itself out of the fermenting vessel?
Super, super curious and appreciate any advice and criticism!
Thank you!
P.S. Thank you to sour_grapes for help with hydrometer reading
Edit: pardon the typo in the title
New to the forum and very new to wine making, loving it so far.
I have gotten started with kits for wine, and real honey for meads. Liking the results so far and I have started doing a little bit of experimentation to see what I like, what I don't like and how yeast behaves.
Have an issue/question that I was not able to find on the forum, or online.
I have tried an experiment where I pitched a top fermenting yeast into a white wine. Before when I used bottom, it was a very straight forward process, nothing complicated. Now that I have tried top fermenting I have had an interesting experience....I have let the wine ferment for about 10 days, and at this point I would do secondary fermentation with gravity being about .0994 with very low airlock activity...... but this time it was sitting about 1.018 and was still very sweet......that said, fermentation was very active to the point where it would spill out of the airlock for a better part of 3 days of nonstop action.
My questions are :
- I am thinking about pitching in bottom fermenting yeast (as I am more familiar with it, I guess) to give a boost to the fermentation and try and bring down the gravity, pushing the wine into the dry territory. I have read that mixing yeast is technically not bad, but it makes me wonder what could have caused this type of active yet low yielding fermentation?
- Should I simply leave the wine to ferment longer, even-though the activity has slowed way down? (I get a bubble every maybe 10 seconds, making 25L / approx 6.5 Gallons) Is this typical of top fermenting yeast?
- Perhaps there are some variables I have not considered?
- Due to it being top fermenting yeast, could it simply have pushed itself out of the fermenting vessel?
Super, super curious and appreciate any advice and criticism!
Thank you!
P.S. Thank you to sour_grapes for help with hydrometer reading
Edit: pardon the typo in the title
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