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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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On Oct 26, 12:51*am, "rec.crafts.winemaking"
> wrote: > Hi Everyone... I ran into a "situation" today and was wondering if > anyone knows enough about yeast to know if I have a problem. > > I have six gallons of Chardonnay fermenting in a 13.5 gallon barrel > (currently at 17 Brix). *I have another 11 gallons in the cold garage > waiting until the barrel reaches Brix 10, then I'll rack to a carboy > and then *place the other 11 gallons in the barrel and start > fermenting on that. > > Okay... My "situation." *I walked in the garage today to find the 11 > gallons bubbling away! *It wasn't bubbling last night, but I did see a > little foam around the meniscus of the six gallon carboy, which made > me concerned. *I didn't see rising bubbles like I do today. *The > weather warmed a bit today. *There was no discernable lees at the > bottom of the glass carboys, so I'm hoping I caught this fast! > > I immediately racked the wine in the barrel to another carboy, then > racked the two other early-fermenting carboys into the barrel. *I > purposely left about 1/2 gallon of wine/lees on the bottom of the > barrel. *I thought that would make a nice yeast starter ready to go. > Regardless of this, I created a yeast starter with enough yeast for > the 11 gallons and pitched it in the barrel. > > My concern is, which yeast will take? *Obviously I have wild yeast > that's become active. *I'm hoping my yeast will take over and dominate > the wild yeast. *Everything is fermenting nicely, I just don't know > which yeast is doing what in the barrel! :-( > > Should I be concerned? *Is there anything else I should do? *I'm using > CY3079 yeast. > > Any help or advice would be appreciated. > > -Paul Your pitched yeast will likely take over, but the results are unpredictable. You probably should have sulphited the must to stun the wild yeast first. I.E. add enough sulphite solution to give the wild yeast a hard time, but not so much to completely inhibit your cultured yeast. Then, pitch a strong yeast starter 12 to 24 hours later once the sulphite has had time to partially react so it is not so strong. This is the same thing that is generally done when the grapes initially come in--sulphite to stun wild organisms, then pitch the yeast later so that it has as little competition as possible. Wild yeast fermentations are un-predictable enough--adding a cultured yeast to an actively fermenting wild yeast might work out fine, but at this point you don't know what you will get. You might find more "off" flavours than you would have had otherwise, as wild yeast often produce more acetic acid and H2S than cultured yeast. I would ferment all the batches separately, then blend at the end, in case one or more batches is spoiled or not up to the standards of the others. I'm sure this is what you were planning anyway, but it is even more important now. Cheers, and good luck. Chris. |
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