Thread: Sparkling wine
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Old 12-04-2008, 06:38 PM posted to rec.crafts.winemaking
jim c
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Posts: 20
Default Sparkling wine

On Apr 12, 1:36*am, KD wrote:
On Apr 11, 9:08*pm, James wrote:



Joe Sallustio wrote:
On Apr 6, 6:05 pm, "Dirty Harry" wrote:


Does anyone here force carbonate sparkling wine? *I have some corny kegs and
lots of Co2 to play with. *Right now I have some white wine in the keg at 35
PSI in the snowbank for about a day. *I've rocked it back and forth a lot to
help the Co2 dissolve. *What pressure do you want to bottle it at? *I have
good quality bottles that I just tried at 35 psi (wearing safety glasses!)
with counter pressure bottler and it worked just fine but the wine is still
lacking major fizz. *Does it need more time? *Also what PSI do most of you
let it soak in at? *This site has a calculator that gave me about 30 psi for
4 volumes at 5C,http://www.iancrockett.com/brewing/info/forcecarb.shtml,
how many volumes do most of you use?


I dont follow that but I shoot for 90 PSIG, 6 atmospheres. *I use
natural carbonation though, not compressed gas.
Joe


I would agree with Joe on that. There are some fizzy wines in the market
place wich are marked Carbonated, meaning that they are force carbonated..


Are you using champagne bottles?


James.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I need help on this topic too, but for a different reason.

I purchased a 'sparkling wine kit' from my local winemaking store,
along with sparkling wine bottles. Did as instructed, stirred in
priming sugar just before bottling, and purchased the recommended
stoppers and wire cages.

Fast forward about five weeks, when I found one of the stoppers on the
basement floor. I knew I had a spare, thought I had simply dropped it
there and thought nothing more of it. But in the middle of the night
it occured to me what may have happened. Sure enough, checked my
bottles the next morning and found that one had blown its top.

A few days later, my husband and I were doing some work in the
basement and heard another POP. And just this evening we were watching
TV in the living room and heard another dreaded POP from downstairs.
That's three bottles lost now!

I followed the directions as well as I could to securing the stoppers,
ensured the wire was below the rim to secure them in place, and
twisted the metal as tightly as I could. Either this method sucks, or
I suck at installing them. In any case, is there something else I can
use to secure the rest? The kit I bought only makes 15 bottles for the
cost of making 30 bottles of regular wine. I've already lost 20% of
them, I don't want to lose them all!

HELP!

KD


From what I have been told so far, if the pressure is at a safe enough
level you could probably use a crown top to cap bottles which have
blown. Just an idea as I am 2 months away from my own method
champenoise experiment...

Jim
 

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