What determines the rate of yeast infestation and fermentationinitiation..?
The acidity of the must, the concentration of sugar, the availability
of nutrient salts, the saturation of dissolved oxygen and the
temperature of the must all seem to play a part in how quickly the
yeast spreads throughout a must and starts fermentation.
Presumably the levels of inhibitors of yeast metabolism and
reproduction and other antagonistic organisms also play a part -
though I have no idea what the effect and nature of these might be.
What else affects the time it takes a must to get going after
pitching?
I have become particularly interested in this after having one recent
5 gallon pitch which was fairly vigorous after 3 hours, but mostly
finding up to 3 days or so is a common induction time.
Many thanks, Jim
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