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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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Posted to rec.crafts.winemaking, rec.crafts.meadmaking
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On Jan 10, 12:07*pm, wrote:
> What have you learned in your wine/mead making? Here are a few things > I've learned so far. > > - Don't let the must set on the gross lees too long. H2S will result, > which is a devil to deal with. Fine lees aren't much of a problem. > - If you're aiming for a sweet wine or mead without the need to > backsweeten, make sure to chose a yeast with a low alcohol tolerance. > - Some yeasts are prone to H2S production, especially so if they are > unhappy. Montrachet is one example. I avoid these yeasts AND make sure > to add nutrients in any case. > > What are your "lessons learned"? > > Greg Again, all of that... In the other post I told you about the experiment with hot bottling, that should be interesting. If I can do this with cheap surgical tubing what a great alternative it would be to using sorbates. My meads always need fining, usually 2 to 3 times the amount of bentonite as a typical white. Sorbate is evil. It never seems to work out well for me. I don't want to back sweeten because I don't make the sweets for myself, others like them. I will come up with an alternative on way or another that I can afford, I don't want to build a sterile filter for 10 gallons a year. Joe |
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