* are you familiar with the concept of ReDox? ,,, oxidation reduction potential.
sulfur chemistry is a reversible reaction driven by the redox potential (available oxygen/ oxidizer) in the wine:
2 H2S + O2. <=> 2 H2O + 2S
If you micro oxygenate as using a barrel/ HDPE carboy you change the redox potential and drive the reaction to the right
If you use Reduless which removes elemental sulfur you drive the reaction to the right
If you have a reduced environment/ squeaky clean air exposure, you drive the reaction to the left
If you add reducing agents as excessive potassium metabisulphite you drive the reaction to the left (do you test free SO2 ?)
Tannins act as oxygen sinks and I can’t predict if that is good or bad in your case, , , , , some of this is how sensitive a taster are you.
Renaissance yeast was a good start BUT a year out yeast are dead so you are living with redox chemistry, , , the smell threshold of methyl mercaptan is 2 ppb, mercaptans as well as hydrogen sulfide will mask young fruity aromatics, (I wonder if you have H2S ?) ,,, if the sulfur has reacted to a mercaptan it is harder to deal with, >>> ie reduce with ascorbic acid then pull the H2S out. Are you sure you are dealing with hydrogen sulphide/ sewer gas? which is detectable in the ppt level. , , , A test, does the smell go away if you shake a half filled sample jar? If you oxidize a mercaptan the threshold is 12 ppb. , , ,
My description of mercaptan taste in a white is bitter notes, loss of fresh fruity aromatics, , , , and I am curious what your cab tastes like, , , , since the local vinters club is dealing with/ trying to solve skunk in whites. Good luck PM me if you would like to talk flavors.