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james 20-08-2004 01:19 AM

Restarting fermentation?
 
I have a blackberry wine that has finished fermenting. I wanted to add
more sugar at sg 1.10 or above but didn't get it done in time. It's
not at a high alcohol content according to the sugar that I originally
added.Can I just add the extra sugar or do I also need to add more
yeast?
Thanks,
James

Jack Keller 20-08-2004 06:28 PM

James, what was your original gravity?

I would shy away from a total graivty of 1.100 or higher for
blackberry, unless you are making a very sweet wine or port. As a dry
wine, it just balances best at around 11.5-12% abv, in my opinion.

Jack Keller, The Winemaking Home Page
http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/

james 21-08-2004 02:54 AM

(Jack Keller) wrote in message om>...
> James, what was your original gravity?
>
> I would shy away from a total graivty of 1.100 or higher for
> blackberry, unless you are making a very sweet wine or port. As a dry
> wine, it just balances best at around 11.5-12% abv, in my opinion.
>
> Jack Keller, The Winemaking Home Page
>
http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/

Jack,
Thanks for the reply.I do not know the original gravity.The SG is now
below 1.000. In my original post,I misstated my target SG at which I
would add more sugar to keep the fermentation going. I meant to type
SG= 1.010 instead,thinking that this would be the lowest point at
which I could add sugar to the must to keep the fermentation going. It
is my Dad's batch of wine and we did not do an original gravity.He
makes wine the "old way". I figured by tasteing it that It had very
little alcohol content and suggested that he add another 2.5 lbs. of
sugar fearing that it might spoil due to low alcohol content. So, I
don't know whether it will begin fermenting again by just adding the
sugar or do I need to add more yeast as well?

james 21-08-2004 02:54 AM

(Jack Keller) wrote in message om>...
> James, what was your original gravity?
>
> I would shy away from a total graivty of 1.100 or higher for
> blackberry, unless you are making a very sweet wine or port. As a dry
> wine, it just balances best at around 11.5-12% abv, in my opinion.
>
> Jack Keller, The Winemaking Home Page
>
http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/

Jack,
Thanks for the reply.I do not know the original gravity.The SG is now
below 1.000. In my original post,I misstated my target SG at which I
would add more sugar to keep the fermentation going. I meant to type
SG= 1.010 instead,thinking that this would be the lowest point at
which I could add sugar to the must to keep the fermentation going. It
is my Dad's batch of wine and we did not do an original gravity.He
makes wine the "old way". I figured by tasteing it that It had very
little alcohol content and suggested that he add another 2.5 lbs. of
sugar fearing that it might spoil due to low alcohol content. So, I
don't know whether it will begin fermenting again by just adding the
sugar or do I need to add more yeast as well?

Roger D. Placer 22-08-2004 01:11 PM

If there are viable yeast cells (probable) and you add sugar
(well-dissolved) to the wine, chances are it will easily re-ferment. The
only trouble you might have is if the alcohol percentage is already near the
threshold of the chosen yeast strain's tolerance. I would remove a portion
of the liquid, dissolve the sugar in it, and add it back to the wine. You
should be able to estimate the quantity to add using the various sugar/SG
tables on the internet.

Regarding the 11.5-12% target PA to balance blackberry, I would say that is
highly dependent on the fruit quantity used in your must. I recently
fermented a 15% blackberry wine (by accident...) but I used 100% juice- no
water - and it is not unbalanced at all. I did nonetheless dilute it by 10%
following fermentation to attain 13.5% alcohol and balance the acid (THAT
was the issue, not the alcohol).

Roger
Quinta do Placer



Jack Keller 23-08-2004 02:39 PM

Roger, not to split hairs, but balance in wine includes acid (and
sugar, and alcohol, and tannin, and glycerol), so if you had to dilute
acidity, it wasn't balanced. I make a "pure" blackberry wine too, and
I too have to correct for acid.

Jack Keller


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