Johncifelli
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I accidentally used bread yeast in my 50 gallons of must and my screwed or can I save it?
Get a good wine yeast and add it into the must, I'd suspect that it will overtake the bread yeast and complete the ferment. In your spot, I'd probably use EC-1118 just to be safe.I accidentally used bread yeast in my 50 gallons of must and my screwed or can I save it?
Thank you very muchI agree with @Johnd on this. I do not think any harm will come from the bread yeast if you provide a good wine yeast, too.
Get a good wine yeast and add it into the must, I'd suspect that it will overtake the bread yeast and complete the ferment. In your spot, I'd probably use EC-1118 just to be safe
Assuming that your boxes are 36 pounds each, three boxes should yield around 10 gallons of must, so it total, you should have around 70 gallons. The small 5g packets of yeast are right-sized for 6 gallons, so you would need 12 packets.......... It's not an exact science, using too little just results in a longer period of time for the yeast to establish a large enough colony to metabolize the sugar (lag time), using more decreases the lag time to produce a large enough colony.How much of the new yeast should I use for 20 boxes of grape
Excellent thank you very muchAssuming that your boxes are 36 pounds each, three boxes should yield around 10 gallons of must, so it total, you should have around 70 gallons. The small 5g packets of yeast are right-sized for 6 gallons, so you would need 12 packets.......... It's not an exact science, using too little just results in a longer period of time for the yeast to establish a large enough colony to metabolize the sugar (lag time), using more decreases the lag time to produce a large enough colony.
What would happen if I just leave it alone? I know dumb questionExcellent thank you very much
No, it's not a dumb question. If you had put no yeast at all in your must, the wild yeast living on the grapes would have fermented the wine. Problem is, we never know what those yeasts are, nor what their alcohol tolerance is, or whether or not they are capable of fermenting the wine to dry, that's why we add cultured yeasts to our wines, in addition to selecting wine yeasts that enhance specific factors in our wines.What would happen if I just leave it alone? I know dumb question
Starting with a non-saccharomyces yeast is the trend, maybe you are on to something I would quickly follow with something that will get the job done, before the environment becomes difficult for the new yeast to start. Good luck, it should be fine.
So should I leave it be?Good advice, but note that bread yeast is a saccharomyces yeast. In fact, it is even S. cerevisiae, i.e., the same species as wine yeast (but different strain). Think schnauzers vs. collies.
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