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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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I often read that the k-meta contain 57% sulphite and the campden
tablets 48%. I would like a clarification on that. A) Is the 57% mean the % of sulphite contain in a given amount of k-meta from wich you will get some bound SO2 and free SO2 OR B) The 57% mean that from any given amount of k-meta added you will roughly get 57% of free SO2 ( theorical of course ) Thanks for your explanations Séb |
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Greg Cook > wrote in message ws.com>...
> > I believe it is 57% of the weight of the K-meta will be SO2. Campden has > other "inert" binders added to it to hold the tablet shape, so it has more > other stuff per gram than pure K-meta. Also, Isn't campden tablets > sodium-meta and not K-meta ? Greg, you can find campden in the form of k-meta too. |
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![]() "seb" > wrote in message m... > I often read that the k-meta contain 57% sulphite and the campden > tablets 48%. I would like a clarification on that. > > A) Is the 57% mean the % of sulphite contain in a given amount of > k-meta from wich you will get some bound SO2 and free SO2 > > OR > > B) The 57% mean that from any given amount of k-meta added you will > roughly get 57% of free SO2 ( theorical of course ) Not quite either of A or B, but B is closer. BTW, forget about Campden tablets if you do any serious amount of winemaking. Buy meta in bulk and weigh it out yourself. You need a balance with an accuracy of 0.1 g or better. You also need to reseal the meta really well or it'll go dead on you. K2S2O5 - straight out of a bag from the manufacturer - usually assays ~50%, ±2% available SO2. The stuff is very reactive to air - especially moist air. By the time you get it the assay will be ~50% if you got a good batch. Remember that part where I said to reseal the meta really well? I meant it. Solutions don't last too long either. Make fresh if you're adding it to your wine. If you use this in a wine that has not been previously sulfited the free SO2 when you're done will be as if you used stuff that was only ~25%. A portion of the sulfite becomes _bound_ in the wine. Once the requirement for bound sulfite has been met, whatever you add beyond that adds directly to the free SO2. That makes late adjustments really easy - assuming you know the pH (which is what determines your target free SO2). This topic is not easy to grasp in its entirety, but it's very important to know about the 0.8 ppm molecular free SO2 requirement and its interrelation with pH and free SO2. Tom S |
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> I often read that the k-meta contain 57% sulphite and the campden
> tablets 48%. I would like a clarification on that. K-meta is about 58% SO2. Campden tablets are designed to have about 0.44 grams of (often K-) meta. Whether they are 48% SO2 or not really depends on the tablet size, which tends to vary depending on the manufacturing process. > B) The 57% mean that from any given amount of k-meta added you will > roughly get 57% of free SO2 ( theorical of course ) It means you'll get ~58% *total* SO2. Some of that will then become free, and some will become bound (total = bound + free). See http://members.tripod.com/~BRotter/SO2.htm for more. Ben |
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