I deal with a dozen commercial winemakers on a pretty regular bases. Not one has ever referred to the specific gravity of the grapes or must, it is always Brix. I’m curious why most on this “winemakingtalk” refer to SG Vs. Brix?
That is a good question.
I like SG, because that is what we actually measure. You measure SG. You infer Brix
Honest question: What do commercial winemakers refer to during the course of fermentation, as the sugars drop? Do they talk about how many Brix the must has left, and, if so, how do they measure this? I am guessing they mean "the Brix that a must of this SG would have if it contained no alcohol."
How do the commercial guys determine ABV? Do they use Brix? Or do they have tools to measure? I haven't searched extensively, but every ABV calculator I've seen uses SG, not brix. Not having fancy lab equipment to test ABV, we have to compute it and we use SG.
With grapes, I use Brix because that's what my refractometer measures. From there though, I convert it to SG to track fermentation and calculate ABV.
I can relate to a brix reading of 12.9, meaning that the solution contains 12.9% sugar
Not saying it’s wrong, I’m just curious why. A carry over from beer making?
I'm curious which inaccuracies you are referring to in regards to SG.As it is going through fermentation there would be some inaccuracies knowing precisely how much sugar is left (without proper compensation) as there would if you were tracking SG.
My point is that, with the exception of this forum, all the discussions with all the winemakers in my circle of contacts talk in terms of brix and not an SG number.
Not saying it’s wrong, I’m just curious why. A carry over from beer making?
I'm curious which inaccuracies you are referring to in regards to SG.
This statement was in response to me, wherein I had reminded us that "12.9 Brix" (on a hydrometer) during fermentation does not mean 12.9% sugar in the must, due to the confounding effects of the ethanol in the must. NorCal was just correctly pointing out that, due to the same effects, you cannot make a simple correlation between the SG and the remaining sugar.
(Of course, the SG itself is accurate, it is what a hydrometer measures, but it requires some work to relate that to the sugar left.)
I believe that is what you meant, @NorCal , but obviously correct me if I am wrong.
Enter your email address to join: