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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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For reasons I can't even explain, I made a sugar beet wine. To make it, I had to cook the sugar beets and then to maximize the sugar extraction (I didn't add any) I decided to run the cooked beets through a blender. The result was 5.5 gallons of liquid that is the consistency of loose apple sauce. To that, I aerated and hit it with pectic enzyme and some yeast, and let it go. It's about a week in, and amazingly, it really hasn't settled much. There is so much pulp, that it's still to the top. I have no idea exactly how much sugar was in it because 1) my hydrometer was broken and 2) I don't think you could have measured it with all that pulp. It was pretty sweet though. So, it's been a week now, and fermentation is slowing down. Any suggestions on how to leave the pulp behind and get it to secondary without losing a ton of liquid? I'm concerned about oxidation too. On this batch, I have not used any sulfite yet - not sure if I should bother at this point. I really can't think of a way to do this without introducing a ton of oxygen. Thanks, --Jeff |
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I've had great success transfering the must into nylon hops bags. I use
Brute barrels as small batch primaries, so, I got some 1/2" dowling at home despot; cut it to straddle the primary w/ an inch overhang on each side. Then, I took a belt sander & flattened each end of the dowel to sit on the primary rim. Tie the hop bag to the dowel so that it doesn't touch the must surface; hang and let it drain this way for a couple days, primary covered of course. The hop bags are machine washable & reusable. I tried pantyhose (new ;^) ) but found that it stretched & dipped into the must, being somewhat self-defeating... HTH, regards, bob "Jeff" wrote in message ... For reasons I can't even explain, I made a sugar beet wine. To make it, I had to cook the sugar beets and then to maximize the sugar extraction (I didn't add any) I decided to run the cooked beets through a blender. The result was 5.5 gallons of liquid that is the consistency of loose apple sauce. To that, I aerated and hit it with pectic enzyme and some yeast, and let it go. It's about a week in, and amazingly, it really hasn't settled much. There is so much pulp, that it's still to the top. I have no idea exactly how much sugar was in it because 1) my hydrometer was broken and 2) I don't think you could have measured it with all that pulp. It was pretty sweet though. So, it's been a week now, and fermentation is slowing down. Any suggestions on how to leave the pulp behind and get it to secondary without losing a ton of liquid? I'm concerned about oxidation too. On this batch, I have not used any sulfite yet - not sure if I should bother at this point. I really can't think of a way to do this without introducing a ton of oxygen. Thanks, --Jeff |