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| Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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Often when I rack or transfer from primary to secondary I get a layer
of fluffy 'lees' or straining bag escapees. Its fluffy stuff, not really solid, but it makes a deeper layer than I'd like at the bottom of the DJ. I usually make enough to have a pint left over and was considering trying to siphon hoover out some of this initial secondary fluffy stuff to replace with the clearer lquid from the pint excess while it is fresh. Then I imagined asking the group and in my imagination your Obi Wan style voices said 'think of the bottom-dwelling yeast Luke - and just rack it later'! I think you are right oh ghostly winemaking apparitions, but I wonder if anyone can confirm if this is what you really would say? Thanks, Jim |
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Well, my son...
![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe |
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On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote:
Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp |
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Thanks for the replies guys.
I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tinybung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp |
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Ah now I found that after a day or two the fluffy 'lees' are floating to the top of the secondary - no doubt carried up
by the tiny carbon dioxide bubbles. From there I can fetch most of them out of the demijohn by straw or teaspoon technology ![]() Jim "jim" wrote in message ... Thanks for the replies guys. I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tinybung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp |
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On Apr 24, 4:51 am, "jim" wrote:
Ah now I found that after a day or two the fluffy 'lees' are floating to the top of the secondary - no doubt carried up by the tiny carbon dioxide bubbles. From there I can fetch most of them out of the demijohn by straw or teaspoon technology ![]() Jim Why don't you just leave it to settle on its own? If the stuff is coming up like that then your wine is most likely still fermenting actively. You'll have to rack anyway after the fermentation is done so why bother with removing the lees at this point - you won't be able to do it full from the top of the carboy. Pp |
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Hi, I would normally agree totally with your thinking, but I've had bits like this before that form mini reefs in the
wine and they disturb me. They hover above the main lees and get racked out with the clearer wine if you're not 100% accurate/lucky. Personally I'd rather get material like this out before it sits for months. It is the kind of stuff I'd not expect to escape the straining bag, but it does - as small particles - then forms these reefs or asteroids of claggy material and I'd just rather get it out when it is easy to do so. I had enough leftover must/pre-wine to overflow the demijohn so it came out - there was an inch thick layer of it in the neck 2 days after racking and I didn't want it there ![]() Jim "pp" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 24, 4:51 am, "jim" wrote: Ah now I found that after a day or two the fluffy 'lees' are floating to the top of the secondary - no doubt carried up by the tiny carbon dioxide bubbles. From there I can fetch most of them out of the demijohn by straw or teaspoon technology ![]() Jim Why don't you just leave it to settle on its own? If the stuff is coming up like that then your wine is most likely still fermenting actively. You'll have to rack anyway after the fermentation is done so why bother with removing the lees at this point - you won't be able to do it full from the top of the carboy. Pp |
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On Apr 23, 4:45 pm, "jim" wrote:
Thanks for the replies guys. I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tinybung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I will have to figure out a way to make a tiny bung for a beer-bottle methinks." You can buy tiny bungs. Guy |
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Thanks Guy, I thought they must be available but after a 5 mile walk I found my winemaking shop was closed today. I
will try on Friday. Cheers again for letting me know that these are available! Jim "guy" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 23, 4:45 pm, "jim" wrote: Thanks for the replies guys. I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tinybung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I will have to figure out a way to make a tiny bung for a beer-bottle methinks." You can buy tiny bungs. Guy |
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On Apr 25, 10:45 am, "jim" wrote:
Thanks Guy, I thought they must be available but after a 5 mile walk I found my winemaking shop was closed today. I will try on Friday. Cheers again for letting me know that these are available! Jim "guy" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 4:45 pm, "jim" wrote: Thanks for the replies guys. I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tinybung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I will have to figure out a way to make a tiny bung for a beer-bottle methinks." You can buy tiny bungs. Guy- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - What size do you need in mm Jim, Ill get it to you....and obviously a nasal cannula would be no problem if you need one.... |
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A good twist of the carboy usually releases the stratified wine
underneath those 'floating reefs of annoyance'. It's a good idea to give carboys a good twist the night before a rack anyways; it seems to get the stuff on the side of the carboy settled. Joe |
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Thanks Joe for the good advice as ever . And Sean, I will try my wine shop again tomorrow - I have access to the car
then, I'm not built for urban walking. If I can't find some stoppers there and the microtubing I surely would appreciate your help brother! Jim "snpm" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 25, 10:45 am, "jim" wrote: Thanks Guy, I thought they must be available but after a 5 mile walk I found my winemaking shop was closed today. I will try on Friday. Cheers again for letting me know that these are available! Jim "guy" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 4:45 pm, "jim" wrote: Thanks for the replies guys. I do put the extra in a small tall container to add in once settled out The problem is the fluffy lees in theDemiJohn, I'm wondering whether or not to re-rack now while the extra I have is fresh. No one siphons out the fluffy bottom ( )sediment so they must have bottle-traps for their excess, I will have to figure out a way to make a tiny bung for a beer-bottle methinks. Jim p.s. Sorry pp for sending this to you privately by acident! "pp" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Apr 23, 9:09 am, Joe Sallustio wrote: Well, my son... ![]() If you put whatever is left in the tallest, slenderest container you have and put it in the fridge it will usually resettle overnight and you can rack off of that. I routinely dump all of my dregs into a container and resettle them and rack off before throwing the rest out. Ice wine bottle are great for this. If you are pulling fine lees you may want to think about racking height. On that resettled wine i use a piece of nasal cannula, it's about 1/8" ID. I vary the height of the receiver to slow the flow when I get near the lees. Joe Or you can decant from the lees instead of racking from a bottle. Pp- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I will have to figure out a way to make a tiny bung for a beer-bottle methinks." You can buy tiny bungs. Guy- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - What size do you need in mm Jim, Ill get it to you....and obviously a nasal cannula would be no problem if you need one.... |