Haha, okay it seems like all I do is field complaints on Winemaking Talk. First my wine was bitter, now it is sour. (the other wine is no long bitter BTW)
I will get some numbers posted, but what I did for 2022 vintage is backwater and acidify to a level to reach 4.8 g/L TA. Which I feel was being conservative.
I am currently running chromatography and will measure pH of the wines.
The tartness sort of hits in the back of my throat. I am a little worried it is VA, but I am not smelling vinegar or nail polish. Although the wine was under airlock, I was unable to stay on top of the SO2 since racking off gross lees. The "wine cellar" was covered by a record snowstorm and I could not get into it until April.
I know tannins will mellow with time, but will acid mellow?
Do other winemakers balance the acid by lightly backsweetening? Seems like it could work.
I have been playing with some other aging tannins also. I tried Quertanin Sweet and really like the results in another wine where it created the perception of sweetness.
I will get some numbers posted, but what I did for 2022 vintage is backwater and acidify to a level to reach 4.8 g/L TA. Which I feel was being conservative.
I am currently running chromatography and will measure pH of the wines.
The tartness sort of hits in the back of my throat. I am a little worried it is VA, but I am not smelling vinegar or nail polish. Although the wine was under airlock, I was unable to stay on top of the SO2 since racking off gross lees. The "wine cellar" was covered by a record snowstorm and I could not get into it until April.
I know tannins will mellow with time, but will acid mellow?
Do other winemakers balance the acid by lightly backsweetening? Seems like it could work.
I have been playing with some other aging tannins also. I tried Quertanin Sweet and really like the results in another wine where it created the perception of sweetness.
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