Hello everyone,
I've had the belief that lower fermentation temps, in general, lead to cleaner and better ferments. Slow and steady. I've been using EC-1118 Prise De Mousse quite a bit for different projects this winter, since my basement is cooler than normal.
The last 3 wine kits I bought all used this yeast (it seems to be a jack of all trades yeast). Right now my basement is in the mid to low 60s. EC-1118 is supposed to work all the way down to 60 degrees. But...
I recently made a Cabernet (from a kit), and OG was 1.099. Well, after 13 days, it stuck on 0.999. 5 days later, still 0.999. The kit says a wine isn't "done" until it's at 0.996 or less. But this one isn't going any lower. I even "helped" this kit by using a couple small doses of Fermaid O during fermentation.
My inclination is that 0.999 is the lowest it's going, and 3 gravity points is relatively inconsequential. But do you think the lower temps caused the yeast to kind of stall out before reaching the desired OG?
I've had the belief that lower fermentation temps, in general, lead to cleaner and better ferments. Slow and steady. I've been using EC-1118 Prise De Mousse quite a bit for different projects this winter, since my basement is cooler than normal.
The last 3 wine kits I bought all used this yeast (it seems to be a jack of all trades yeast). Right now my basement is in the mid to low 60s. EC-1118 is supposed to work all the way down to 60 degrees. But...
I recently made a Cabernet (from a kit), and OG was 1.099. Well, after 13 days, it stuck on 0.999. 5 days later, still 0.999. The kit says a wine isn't "done" until it's at 0.996 or less. But this one isn't going any lower. I even "helped" this kit by using a couple small doses of Fermaid O during fermentation.
My inclination is that 0.999 is the lowest it's going, and 3 gravity points is relatively inconsequential. But do you think the lower temps caused the yeast to kind of stall out before reaching the desired OG?
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