Hello all!
I've been brewing beer for a number of years now and have only recently begun playing with wine making through kits. I'm anticipating a small problem with my current batch and would love some thoughts. The kit is a 3-gallon Cabernet Sauvignon. In a nutshell, I suspect that my OG was above 1.110, which I realize was higher than it normally should be. Why I 'suspect' this rather than know it is a long and slightly embarrassing tale involving a late-night decision to start the kit, a probably poorly mixed batch of concentrate, and a bad refractometer reading. Regardless, I'm at the 3-week mark, and I think that fermentation has largely slowed if not stopped with SG currently around 1.015-1.017 and ~12-13% alcohol (I've had a pretty steady SG reading for 3-4 days now).
Taste-wise, the wine is definitely sweeter than I prefer, and based on the SG there's still a decent amount of sugars in there - the yeast included in the kit was Lalvin D47, which looks to have an alcohol tolerance around 14% which means I'm likely bumping up against the alcohol tolerance, even if it continues to drop in secondary. Based on the calculators, if I can get it to fully dry, it'll be 15-16%, so at/above the usual alcohol tolerance for the yeast, which I suspect means they'll be pretty stressed, which isn't ideal in my experience.
I think my main question is whether I should expect that SG to drop to dry eventually, and if it does, am I correct to worry about off flavors from the alcohol stress? If the answer to both of those is "yes" then what options do I have to get the fermentation going again?
I was considering either
A) diluting with distilled water to drop the alcohol percentage to something more reasonable (which would also serve to lower the final alcohol level to something more traditional) or
B) adding some higher alcohol tolerant yeast that I have on hand (which would potentially leave me with a 16%+ wine). I have Red Star Pasteur Red that goes to 16% and the Premier Cuvee that goes to 18%.
Thoughts from the group will be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Tom
I've been brewing beer for a number of years now and have only recently begun playing with wine making through kits. I'm anticipating a small problem with my current batch and would love some thoughts. The kit is a 3-gallon Cabernet Sauvignon. In a nutshell, I suspect that my OG was above 1.110, which I realize was higher than it normally should be. Why I 'suspect' this rather than know it is a long and slightly embarrassing tale involving a late-night decision to start the kit, a probably poorly mixed batch of concentrate, and a bad refractometer reading. Regardless, I'm at the 3-week mark, and I think that fermentation has largely slowed if not stopped with SG currently around 1.015-1.017 and ~12-13% alcohol (I've had a pretty steady SG reading for 3-4 days now).
Taste-wise, the wine is definitely sweeter than I prefer, and based on the SG there's still a decent amount of sugars in there - the yeast included in the kit was Lalvin D47, which looks to have an alcohol tolerance around 14% which means I'm likely bumping up against the alcohol tolerance, even if it continues to drop in secondary. Based on the calculators, if I can get it to fully dry, it'll be 15-16%, so at/above the usual alcohol tolerance for the yeast, which I suspect means they'll be pretty stressed, which isn't ideal in my experience.
I think my main question is whether I should expect that SG to drop to dry eventually, and if it does, am I correct to worry about off flavors from the alcohol stress? If the answer to both of those is "yes" then what options do I have to get the fermentation going again?
I was considering either
A) diluting with distilled water to drop the alcohol percentage to something more reasonable (which would also serve to lower the final alcohol level to something more traditional) or
B) adding some higher alcohol tolerant yeast that I have on hand (which would potentially leave me with a 16%+ wine). I have Red Star Pasteur Red that goes to 16% and the Premier Cuvee that goes to 18%.
Thoughts from the group will be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Tom