Which type/brand of bentonite do you use?
LD Carlson is the stuff the wine making merchants sell. Seems to be high quality stuff.
Which type/brand of bentonite do you use?
Shouldn't they all ferment dry anyway? Just take a gravity reading, under 1 = finished.
In this case, the og was so low that this wouldn't happen.Not if your OG overshoots the alcohol tolerance of your yeast strain. For example, my most recent semi-sweet mead stopped at 14% (EtOh tolerance max for D47) and left just enough sugar in solution for an FG of 1.020. I racked it so many times afterward that I was confident enough to bottle without any agents to stop further fermentation and without the need to backsweeten.
Correct.In this case, the og was so low that this wouldn't happen.
I understand the question now. I thought the question was, “shouldn’t all meads ferment dry?”, but it was more of a, “shouldn’t all yeasts ferment this particular batch dry?”
proteins and other compounds in the honeyWhat is causing it?
How to prevent it?
How best to treat it if it happens?
What's strange is that the 71B batch was clear initially (in fact, IIRC, it was the first to clear) and then it seemed to develop a considerable haze later. Go figure.
What's strange is that the 71B batch was clear initially (in fact, IIRC, it was the first to clear) and then it seemed to develop a considerable haze later. Go figure.
Very few meads clear without some kind of help.
What yeast?Odd, all the meads myself or my stepson have made cleared and did so quickly.
You know this because you have the report for it or just guessing?We use florida spring water so it's very high in calcium, and yes Tampa is just across the bay.
Thanks, another hintWe use florida spring water so it's very high in calcium, and yes Tampa is just across the bay.
Same with beer...
Which is why us homebrewers do vigorous boils, kettle fining, cold crashing, gelatin, etc...
The techniques and additives are slightly different in the mead/wine world, but they're still well known. I don't understand the reluctance that many people have to using them...
We use florida spring water so it's very high in calcium, and yes Tampa is just across the bay.
51ppm calciumZephyrhills is the most prominent