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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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It seems more convenient when bottling from individual gallons to pour the
wine instead of siphoning? Is there a problem with too much oxygen exposure when doing this for small batches? Thanks Joe |
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Pouring will cause aeration, not just air contact. That is very rough
handling. I would not say it will ruin your wine and it may depend on the level of sulfite you have in the wine, but I would not recommend it. I would imagine bottle shock would last much longer. Also, when pouring with a funnel, it is easy to have a run over. If you use a filling wand with the automatic cut off valve on the bottom, it is much less likely and you get no splashing. They are cheap. If you do not have one, I recommend that you get one. Ray "Joe Ae" > wrote in message . .. > It seems more convenient when bottling from individual gallons to pour the > wine instead of siphoning? Is there a problem with too much oxygen exposure > when doing this for small batches? > > Thanks > Joe > > > |
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> It seems more convenient when bottling from individual gallons to pour the
> wine instead of siphoning? Is there a problem with too much oxygen exposure > when doing this for small batches? Yes, you will risk exposing the wine to a lot of O2 this way leading to increased bottle shock and a potential loss of aromatics. Siphoning is better. Sparging your receiving vessel with CO2 and syphoning is even better still. Ben |
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I have several hoses and attachments including a filling wand. They work
fine when bottling from djs and the like but I don't have the right one for gallons and I always end up spilling a little. I was hoping if I am careful and pour while tilting the funnel so the wine doesn't splash but it sounds like even that will cause too much aeration. Time to go shopping. thanks Joe "Ray" > wrote in message om... > Pouring will cause aeration, not just air contact. That is very rough > handling. I would not say it will ruin your wine and it may depend on the > level of sulfite you have in the wine, but I would not recommend it. I > would imagine bottle shock would last much longer. > > Also, when pouring with a funnel, it is easy to have a run over. If you use > a filling wand with the automatic cut off valve on the bottom, it is much > less likely and you get no splashing. They are cheap. If you do not have > one, I recommend that you get one. > > Ray > > "Joe Ae" > wrote in message > . .. > > It seems more convenient when bottling from individual gallons to pour the > > wine instead of siphoning? Is there a problem with too much oxygen > exposure > > when doing this for small batches? > > > > Thanks > > Joe > > > > > > > > |
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I often pour the wine just to save time and I don't think its ruined any
batches - other people's experiences might differ - but at the end of the day give it a go and live dangerously! "Joe Ae" > wrote in message . .. > It seems more convenient when bottling from individual gallons to pour the > wine instead of siphoning? Is there a problem with too much oxygen exposure > when doing this for small batches? > > Thanks > Joe > > > |
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