NorCal
Senior Member
The back story. I had a large pick up day of three bins of grapes last September; 1/2 ton of Petite Sirah, 1+ ton Mourvedre (40% for me, 60% making for someone else). The vineyard had 250-300 pounds of left over Cab Franc and they asked me if I wanted it. What was I going to say?
The three bins of grapes were crushed and fermenting in macrobin, the Cab Franc was fermented in the 55 gallon stainless steel Wineasy container. I was short yeast and nutrients, so I used the Avante pressings from another ferment to innocualate the Cab Franc that just completed and called it a day. The Cab Franc ferment was sluggish and I ended up having to press the Cab Franc before it was done, because I needed the Wineasy to press three bins of grapes that were done fementing.
My bet was the unfinished Cab Franc would go dry, post press, while it was going through MLF, as other wines I have pressed early have done. Well, it never did and I have 20 gallons of sweet Cab Franc. Not super sweet, but enough that it is not a wine that I would reach for. I do however have friends and family that I think it would be a barn favorite. The concern is bottle stability with the residual sugar. My thoughts are to take the wine out of the wine box and try to get the temperature into the 70's and see if this initiates any further fermentation. If not, bottle it and roll the dice that it will remain stable. Another option is to add this sweet Cab Franc to this year's bin of Cab Franc, while it is in the heat of active fermentation. I do have some other wine that I could blend with, to reduce the % of residual sugar, but don't want to create more wine I don't enjoy.
Pic from racking last night. Thoughts?
The three bins of grapes were crushed and fermenting in macrobin, the Cab Franc was fermented in the 55 gallon stainless steel Wineasy container. I was short yeast and nutrients, so I used the Avante pressings from another ferment to innocualate the Cab Franc that just completed and called it a day. The Cab Franc ferment was sluggish and I ended up having to press the Cab Franc before it was done, because I needed the Wineasy to press three bins of grapes that were done fementing.
My bet was the unfinished Cab Franc would go dry, post press, while it was going through MLF, as other wines I have pressed early have done. Well, it never did and I have 20 gallons of sweet Cab Franc. Not super sweet, but enough that it is not a wine that I would reach for. I do however have friends and family that I think it would be a barn favorite. The concern is bottle stability with the residual sugar. My thoughts are to take the wine out of the wine box and try to get the temperature into the 70's and see if this initiates any further fermentation. If not, bottle it and roll the dice that it will remain stable. Another option is to add this sweet Cab Franc to this year's bin of Cab Franc, while it is in the heat of active fermentation. I do have some other wine that I could blend with, to reduce the % of residual sugar, but don't want to create more wine I don't enjoy.
Pic from racking last night. Thoughts?