This will be my fourth vintage of making an off-dry Riesling. My process for the first three attempts has been this:
1. Allow the wine to ferment dry
2. Store in bulk and let time clear and degas for 6 months
3. Rack, add sorbate, back sweeten (simple syrup) to taste and store in bulk for 3-4 more months
4. Filter (2 micron) and bottle
I've been happy with each of these wines and my sweet preference lies squarely in the middle of completely dry and a typical commercially made off-dry wine.
In a couple of weeks I'll be getting 20 gallons of frozen juice (2022 White Salmon Vineyard) from the Columbia Basin.
My process this time will be slightly different. I don't want to use sorbate and instead of simple syrup to sweeten, use some of the unfermented juice.
Without the use of sorbate, I'm concerned fermentation will kick off again when I add the juice to sweeten it up.
Options include:
1. Refrigerate/freeze the wine to "kill" the yeast - there seems to be conflicting reports that this is even viable or reliable
2. Slam it with kMeta to "kill" the yeast - I'm a 'less is more' guy which is why I don't want to use sorbate and, don't want to over sulfite the wine - and, would this even work?
3. Filter 0.2 -0.45 to strain out any yeast - this is expensive and requires equipment I don't have
How do I make an off-dry wine without the use of sorbate?
1. Allow the wine to ferment dry
2. Store in bulk and let time clear and degas for 6 months
3. Rack, add sorbate, back sweeten (simple syrup) to taste and store in bulk for 3-4 more months
4. Filter (2 micron) and bottle
I've been happy with each of these wines and my sweet preference lies squarely in the middle of completely dry and a typical commercially made off-dry wine.
In a couple of weeks I'll be getting 20 gallons of frozen juice (2022 White Salmon Vineyard) from the Columbia Basin.
My process this time will be slightly different. I don't want to use sorbate and instead of simple syrup to sweeten, use some of the unfermented juice.
Without the use of sorbate, I'm concerned fermentation will kick off again when I add the juice to sweeten it up.
Options include:
1. Refrigerate/freeze the wine to "kill" the yeast - there seems to be conflicting reports that this is even viable or reliable
2. Slam it with kMeta to "kill" the yeast - I'm a 'less is more' guy which is why I don't want to use sorbate and, don't want to over sulfite the wine - and, would this even work?
3. Filter 0.2 -0.45 to strain out any yeast - this is expensive and requires equipment I don't have
How do I make an off-dry wine without the use of sorbate?