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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.

Tipping The Bottle and filtering



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 28-03-2004, 05:35 PM
Steve Lortie
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 28-03-2004, 06:21 PM
A.J. Rawls
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

I have a superjet in the house but I rarely filter my wines... I do
almost always use an airlock bung to tip

A. J. Rawls
Anchorage, Alaska, USA

On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 11:35:19 -0500, "Steve Lortie"
wrote:

In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?


  #3 (permalink)  
Old 28-03-2004, 08:10 PM
Daniel_B
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

I don't filter.

"Steve Lortie" wrote in message
...
In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every

drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?





  #4 (permalink)  
Old 28-03-2004, 09:58 PM
Dave Allyn
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

I have been known to be stingy and use a coffee filter for that last
little bit, but I usually keep this seperate from the rest of the
batch...

This last time I tried tipping, and was able to save alot more of the
wine. I only lost maby 2 % or so on a one gallon container.

Alot of times I use bottles for that extra used for topping up, and
have found that if I'm carefull, I can decant the liquid off the
sediment without too much trouble. I tend to use only clear bottles,
so I can see it better, and stop when I get too close to the sediment.




On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 11:35:19 -0500, "Steve Lortie"
wrote:

In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?




email: dallyn_spam at yahoo dot com
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 29-03-2004, 02:53 PM
Tom S
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering


"Steve Lortie" wrote in message
...
I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?


If you can avoid filtration that's a good thing. The wine suffers some from
the extra handling and loses a bit of fullness on the palate.

Tom S


  #6 (permalink)  
Old 29-03-2004, 11:30 PM
Joe Sallustio
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

I rarely filter, usually only whites if at all. I always fine though,
usually bentonite on whites, hot mix sparkloid on reds.
Regards,
Joe

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?

  #7 (permalink)  
Old 30-03-2004, 12:02 AM
Ray
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

I have never filtered in 25+ years. Though I have considered it a few
times.

Ray

"Steve Lortie" wrote in message
...
In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every

drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?




  #8 (permalink)  
Old 30-03-2004, 06:08 PM
Greg Cook
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

On 3/28/04 10:35 AM, in article ,
"Steve Lortie" wrote:

In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?



Well -- I do filter some, but I never filter a wine that is cloudy or still
contains sediment. When racking from lots of sediment, I don't worry about a
bit getting in until I know the wine will be racked for the last time.

--
Greg Cook
http://homepage.mac.com/gregcook/Wine

(remove spamblocker from my email)

  #9 (permalink)  
Old 31-03-2004, 03:41 AM
Patrick McDonald
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Default Tipping The Bottle and filtering

No filtering but use the Tom S-inspired washing machine centrifuge for
what's left to extract that last bit of wine from the lees.

"Steve Lortie" wrote in message
...
In regards to tipping the carboy, I also tip the carboy (because every

drop
does count), and I do it right after the last racking so the sediment all
goes to one side then gently tip it the other way the day before bottling.

I noticed that no one mentioned they weren't concerned about a bit of
sediment because they filter anyway. Does anyone not filter their wine?




 




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