Carbenet Sauvignon from Santa Cruz, 12.5% alcohol, dry and lighter bodied for the type (colder year). I made a mistake and used someone else's numbers for total acid (same crush and grapes). They were off from my portion of the batch by about 1g/L. It was foolish because there are always differences and I should know better. I then added too much tartaric before my primary fermentation. This had me up at 7.6-7.8 g/L after primary ferment. Primary went off without a hitch, and then MLF was kind enough to drop me to 6.6 g/L with a final pH of 3.49. So much better, but still too much to be palatable.
The wine is young as it was crushed in Sept. So I expect it tastes green and all that. But I can tell, despite the green harsh flavors, the acid is way off balance and that is not really going to improve much. It needs to be dropped by at least another 1g/L and probably more to be balanced. I know that by aging, tartaric will drop out. But I was reading it only drops about 200-300 mg/L. That wouldn't be near enough to compensate for the harshness I am tasting.
So I need deacidify. Question is When? Before more aging and flavor/aroma development? Or do I wait until I have dropped out the last of the tartaric? I have heard that deacidification produces bubbles that wreck the delicate flavors from aging. Seems like earlier interventions are always better. What do you think?
Thanks!
The wine is young as it was crushed in Sept. So I expect it tastes green and all that. But I can tell, despite the green harsh flavors, the acid is way off balance and that is not really going to improve much. It needs to be dropped by at least another 1g/L and probably more to be balanced. I know that by aging, tartaric will drop out. But I was reading it only drops about 200-300 mg/L. That wouldn't be near enough to compensate for the harshness I am tasting.
So I need deacidify. Question is When? Before more aging and flavor/aroma development? Or do I wait until I have dropped out the last of the tartaric? I have heard that deacidification produces bubbles that wreck the delicate flavors from aging. Seems like earlier interventions are always better. What do you think?
Thanks!