singingfun
Junior
- Joined
- May 14, 2012
- Messages
- 1
- Reaction score
- 0
Greetings from Maryland. This is my first ever post on this site and I hope I'm following correct protocol.
My friend and I have been making kit wines for about 1-1/2 years now. She grew up with her dad making wine so I always defer to her expertise. We live 30 minutes apart and the wine is being made in my basement. We get together every couple of months to bottle the wine that is ready and start one or two new batches. I handle the details that happen in between - racking and adding stabilizers, etc.
We have one disagreement running right now and it has to do with the amount of water that we add in the first step. Of course we have the primary fermenters but when we are adding water to the line, we can't agree on where the line is. I know this sounds dumb but as soon as it starts to approach the line, she wants to stop adding water. We easily could be adding another entire gallon of water and it would be more "on the line."
This would not matter except, when I go to rack it to the 6 gallon carboy, there isn't enough wine to fill it. This puts me in a dilemma. Since it's in my basement, I feel deeply responsible for this stage of the wine. One time I added distilled water and it took a gallon to top it off. My friend prefers that I NOT do this, saying it's watering it down. I disagree. The kit was meant to have the correct amount of water and it needs to be there. I do think it should be added at the beginning, however, not at the first racking.
One time she asked me to go out and buy cheap wine from the store to top it off. So this added about $15 to the cost of the wine and I was not happy to be adding a cheap store brand to our creation.
This time, I came up with an idea that I think will please us both.
At the second racking, the one where we take it from 6 to 5 gallons, I always save the remaining wine. I put it in big wine bottles and jokingly refer to it as sludge. Sometimes we drink the sludge later when she comes over to bottle. Sometimes I just drink a couple glasses of it here and there. With the last 2 batches of wine, the ones we bottled a week ago, I didn't drink any of the sludge (dieting). So here I have a big airspace in 2 carboys and enough sludge to top both off.
I have several reasons for wanting to resolve this problem. First, I don't want my wine concentrated. Second, we did lose one batch of wine due to mold on top. The wine company replaced it but I'm sure they won't continue doing that. I feel like the bigger airspace on top, the more potential there is for mold. Is my thinking correct? So I want to get the level up to where the bottle is skinny and have the airlock right on top of it.
If I continue to use the sludge at this stage, and I really am comfortable with this idea, I think I need to put a good cork in those big bottles at the second racking. I usually use the corks that you can pull out by hand and they are not as tight.
Another thing I am noticing is the more oak that goes into the first step, the more we need to overcompensate for adding water. The oak soaks up the water so that leaves us with less wine coming through.
I did want to also comment that one of the wines I'm making right now is Piesporter. It's our second time making this wine and I actually paid for this batch to be entirely mine because I love it so much. It has dried flowers sprinkled over the top and by the time I rack, those darn flowers are interspersed throughout and continuously clog up the siphon. I had to give up siphoning into the carboy when there was really a lot of wine left at the bottom. It was thick at the bottom but I ended up throwing so much out that I wondered if I should have removed the screen from the bottom of the siphon and just transferred more of the thick stuff over to the carboy.
If you are curious, I ended up adding Luna Bianca (more than 150 mL) to the Piesporter. I added about the same amount of Meritage to our current batch of Stag's Leap Merlot. I think these will be compatible blends.
Any advice you can give me is welcome.
Oh, I did have one last thought. It has to do with the sludge I'm adding to new wine. Is there anything in the "sludge" that should not be in wine that is just starting out? I don't want to be adding anything at an early stage that was meant for a later stage. I do try to take it off the top of the bottle and stop adding when it gets thicker at the bottom.
Okay. Thanks for any advice.

My friend and I have been making kit wines for about 1-1/2 years now. She grew up with her dad making wine so I always defer to her expertise. We live 30 minutes apart and the wine is being made in my basement. We get together every couple of months to bottle the wine that is ready and start one or two new batches. I handle the details that happen in between - racking and adding stabilizers, etc.
We have one disagreement running right now and it has to do with the amount of water that we add in the first step. Of course we have the primary fermenters but when we are adding water to the line, we can't agree on where the line is. I know this sounds dumb but as soon as it starts to approach the line, she wants to stop adding water. We easily could be adding another entire gallon of water and it would be more "on the line."
This would not matter except, when I go to rack it to the 6 gallon carboy, there isn't enough wine to fill it. This puts me in a dilemma. Since it's in my basement, I feel deeply responsible for this stage of the wine. One time I added distilled water and it took a gallon to top it off. My friend prefers that I NOT do this, saying it's watering it down. I disagree. The kit was meant to have the correct amount of water and it needs to be there. I do think it should be added at the beginning, however, not at the first racking.
One time she asked me to go out and buy cheap wine from the store to top it off. So this added about $15 to the cost of the wine and I was not happy to be adding a cheap store brand to our creation.
This time, I came up with an idea that I think will please us both.
At the second racking, the one where we take it from 6 to 5 gallons, I always save the remaining wine. I put it in big wine bottles and jokingly refer to it as sludge. Sometimes we drink the sludge later when she comes over to bottle. Sometimes I just drink a couple glasses of it here and there. With the last 2 batches of wine, the ones we bottled a week ago, I didn't drink any of the sludge (dieting). So here I have a big airspace in 2 carboys and enough sludge to top both off.
I have several reasons for wanting to resolve this problem. First, I don't want my wine concentrated. Second, we did lose one batch of wine due to mold on top. The wine company replaced it but I'm sure they won't continue doing that. I feel like the bigger airspace on top, the more potential there is for mold. Is my thinking correct? So I want to get the level up to where the bottle is skinny and have the airlock right on top of it.
If I continue to use the sludge at this stage, and I really am comfortable with this idea, I think I need to put a good cork in those big bottles at the second racking. I usually use the corks that you can pull out by hand and they are not as tight.
Another thing I am noticing is the more oak that goes into the first step, the more we need to overcompensate for adding water. The oak soaks up the water so that leaves us with less wine coming through.
I did want to also comment that one of the wines I'm making right now is Piesporter. It's our second time making this wine and I actually paid for this batch to be entirely mine because I love it so much. It has dried flowers sprinkled over the top and by the time I rack, those darn flowers are interspersed throughout and continuously clog up the siphon. I had to give up siphoning into the carboy when there was really a lot of wine left at the bottom. It was thick at the bottom but I ended up throwing so much out that I wondered if I should have removed the screen from the bottom of the siphon and just transferred more of the thick stuff over to the carboy.
If you are curious, I ended up adding Luna Bianca (more than 150 mL) to the Piesporter. I added about the same amount of Meritage to our current batch of Stag's Leap Merlot. I think these will be compatible blends.
Any advice you can give me is welcome.
Oh, I did have one last thought. It has to do with the sludge I'm adding to new wine. Is there anything in the "sludge" that should not be in wine that is just starting out? I don't want to be adding anything at an early stage that was meant for a later stage. I do try to take it off the top of the bottle and stop adding when it gets thicker at the bottom.
Okay. Thanks for any advice.
