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This may sound a little crazy but here goes. In September of 2023 I purchased several buckets of Malbec juice and fermented it on skins. I recently went to bottle and was not happy with the wine. Plus it was very red. I was expecting a Malbec to be dark. I bottled two buckets and have one still in a carboy. Here comes the crazy part. If I were to put this wine in a fermenting bucket and added sugar, fruit like blueberries or blackberries and yeast, would it take off or would the alcohol prevent further fermentation. Bottom line….would it be a waste of time.
* The darkest color I have in hand is aronia. (where are you located ?) I like blackberry and black raspberry as coloring agents too but would rank them as about 1/5 the intensity.
* 13% alcohol would not
Kill 1118. Most yeast would tolerate up to 15% so it is a risk, but ought to work.
* I see blueberry Merlot in the wine club. I like the mix so am tempted to say Malbec would also be OK.
* have you heard the phrase “oxygen is the enemy of alcohol” ? ? As a guess if you aireated your wine enough to grow yeast you should be able to taste acetaldehyde. If you are still tasting lots of tannin you might pull a refermentation off. On my part I would be tempted to do a separate 5 liter fermentation and not risk the Malbec. Option two would be go to my freezer and see how much aronia is there. A quart of juice could be sterilized then added to the Malbec. 2023, over a year old, ought to have the yeast settled out so accidental refermentation ought to be a low risk. (there also is black raspberry juice)
* I have worked on the lab bench so I would consider one to five ml of almond extract to up the flavor. I also would try a chocolate extract. Without adding vanilla the chocolate polyphenols would dominate, give a slight impression of chocolate but not be overpowering. (Making your own extract with cocoa powder is messy but easy.)
* I like tannin in wine. Are you satisfied with the astringent notes? As an experiment I did a mulberry juice with the maximum package direction of grape tannin. It passes as a “big red wine”. ? Scott Labs finishing tannin is good, but they have too many choices.
 
* The darkest color I have in hand is aronia. (where are you located ?) I like blackberry and black raspberry as coloring agents too but would rank them as about 1/5 the intensity.
* 13% alcohol would not
Kill 1118. Most yeast would tolerate up to 15% so it is a risk, but ought to work.
* I see blueberry Merlot in the wine club. I like the mix so am tempted to say Malbec would also be OK.
* have you heard the phrase “oxygen is the enemy of alcohol” ? ? As a guess if you aireated your wine enough to grow yeast you should be able to taste acetaldehyde. If you are still tasting lots of tannin you might pull a refermentation off. On my part I would be tempted to do a separate 5 liter fermentation and not risk the Malbec. Option two would be go to my freezer and see how much aronia is there. A quart of juice could be sterilized then added to the Malbec. 2023, over a year old, ought to have the yeast settled out so accidental refermentation ought to be a low risk. (there also is black raspberry juice)
* I have worked on the lab bench so I would consider one to five ml of almond extract to up the flavor. I also would try a chocolate extract. Without adding vanilla the chocolate polyphenols would dominate, give a slight impression of chocolate but not be overpowering. (Making your own extract with cocoa powder is messy but easy.)
* I like tannin in wine. Are you satisfied with the astringent notes? As an experiment I did a mulberry juice with the maximum package direction of grape tannin. It passes as a “big red wine”. ? Scott Labs finishing tannin is good, but they have too many choices.
I need some time to digest what you just said. Thanks for taking the time.
 
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