Could you please tell me your racking schedule and bulk aging before bottling? And how long you bottle age? It should taste pretty much how you want it before bottling correct? It’s not gonna fix itself once bottling correct?
I’m using stainless steel tanks with floating lids.
Again thanks for your time!!
OK, this is going to be long.........warning
I start with my own grapes. I crush and press, with variations, to get to juice. I don’t put in any Kmeta as I make sure my grapes are clean and cold as the morning is. I ferment in barrels or ss beerkegs, 15gal. I leave a good bit of headspace but put on an airlock to keep stuff like fruit flies out. Typically I don’t do a nutrient addition. Again my grapes and that seems to work with them. Your juice might need it. I don’t stir or disturb, even check sugar, till the bubbles slow down. That is usually at 4-5 days. I a/c my shop to ~70. I rack to fresh kegs and leave the gross lees behind airlock and let it finish, 10-14 days.
At this point the regime depends on the grape and what I want. Chard, Pinot Blanc, and Viognier may get malo. If not, I dose with meta for the pH. For Sauv Blanc, Riesling and a blend I do, I test and adjust Kmeta at anywhere from 3 to 9 months, filter, rest and bottle. Those are fresher wines, my goal, and are drinkable in another 6 months, but so far have aged well for a couple of years. The others may go a year before bottleing depending on malo, oak, and blending.
So in addition to the initial meta addition
@BigH mentioned, the only other significant difference I see is headspace. I admit I only acquired a VCT this year and it is full of Cab. Do you leave headspace between the lid and the wine as it ferments? If not, where does the foam go? If I don’t leave about 20% of the keg empty, it foams out the airlock. You stir, and I don’t and maybe that is doing the same. I can’t help but think your yeast is getting stressed.
Only other thing I can think of is yeast selection. I used to use QA23 and only had an issue a couple of times, but I switched to an organic, no H2S yeast last year, Ossia, last year, like it so I’m going to do the same this.
As for bottling, H2S and mercaptans only get worse the longer you ignore them. I’ve some bottled wine to prove that. Splash rack as soon as you detect it, and keep at it till it is gone. Whites do develop in the bottle but depending on the style, you may may not bottle age too long. Most Pinot Gris I see on the market is pretty young.