Brew-Dude
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- Jan 26, 2015
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If there is another forum post about this, please direct me there.
Hello home brewers, I'm making a wine from a Master Vintner wine Kit for the 2nd time ever. Its a Pinot Noir 6 gallon batch and i've followed most of the direction to a "T". I did make some small additions at the beginning of the wine making process. I boiled 2-3 gallons of water and added 1 pound of corn sugar to it in hopes of getting a higher starting specific gravity as i normally do when making ciders. I cooled it down and added it to the juice in a bag which came with the kit. SG was 1.095 to start with. Added Yeast as directed.
In the primary, there was lots of airlock activity within about 18 hours. Per the directions, i stirred the wine daily and i tried to take gravity readings about every 2-3 days. Gravity continuted to drop as one would expect. At around SG 1.06 i added the yeast nutrient provided by the kit. 3 days later, day 6 of fermentation, i added a bit more beer yeast nutrient in fear that the yeast wouldn't be healthy enough to reach the higher ABV i was hoping to reach. The directions said to move wine into a secondary on day 6 but there was still so much foam and airlock activity going on, so i let it sit for a couple more days. I drew a sample on day 10 and the SG was 1.004 which was below the 1.010 threshold to rack to the secondary set forth by M.V. Tim Vandergrift, But it was still bubbling vigorously. At any rate, i decided to proceed and rack to secondary the next morning.
Today I sanitized all equipment using StarSan no rinse. The wine is still showing lots of airlock activity. A "burp" every 2-3 seconds. The directions said to add oak chips before racking to secondary but due to all the foam in the carboy i chose to add it after i racked so they would not be carried out by the foam. after it was full I added them and used a sanitized plastic spoon to break up the wood chunks on the surface of the wine. Within seconds of stirring, the carboy began to erupt with foam out of the top. I quickly grabbed some FermCap that i happen to have in my fridge to stop the CO2 explosion. This seemed to help almost immediately. Extreme bubbling continued for 30-45 minutes. Then slowed to a bubble every 1-2 seconds from airlock.
I am fully aware that airlock activity does not necessarily mean active fermentation. This being only my 2nd wine, i'm a bit confused as to what the hell is going on.
I'm curious if I've completely messed this wine up or is everything okay and i've over reacting. Is there something i should have done differently or not at all? Thank you for taking the time to read this.
PS I tasted the wine that was left in the bottom of primary and it didn't have any crazy off flavors or jet fuel alcohol tastes. I thought it was pretty good to the taste for being so young.
Thanks
Brew-Dude
Hello home brewers, I'm making a wine from a Master Vintner wine Kit for the 2nd time ever. Its a Pinot Noir 6 gallon batch and i've followed most of the direction to a "T". I did make some small additions at the beginning of the wine making process. I boiled 2-3 gallons of water and added 1 pound of corn sugar to it in hopes of getting a higher starting specific gravity as i normally do when making ciders. I cooled it down and added it to the juice in a bag which came with the kit. SG was 1.095 to start with. Added Yeast as directed.
In the primary, there was lots of airlock activity within about 18 hours. Per the directions, i stirred the wine daily and i tried to take gravity readings about every 2-3 days. Gravity continuted to drop as one would expect. At around SG 1.06 i added the yeast nutrient provided by the kit. 3 days later, day 6 of fermentation, i added a bit more beer yeast nutrient in fear that the yeast wouldn't be healthy enough to reach the higher ABV i was hoping to reach. The directions said to move wine into a secondary on day 6 but there was still so much foam and airlock activity going on, so i let it sit for a couple more days. I drew a sample on day 10 and the SG was 1.004 which was below the 1.010 threshold to rack to the secondary set forth by M.V. Tim Vandergrift, But it was still bubbling vigorously. At any rate, i decided to proceed and rack to secondary the next morning.
Today I sanitized all equipment using StarSan no rinse. The wine is still showing lots of airlock activity. A "burp" every 2-3 seconds. The directions said to add oak chips before racking to secondary but due to all the foam in the carboy i chose to add it after i racked so they would not be carried out by the foam. after it was full I added them and used a sanitized plastic spoon to break up the wood chunks on the surface of the wine. Within seconds of stirring, the carboy began to erupt with foam out of the top. I quickly grabbed some FermCap that i happen to have in my fridge to stop the CO2 explosion. This seemed to help almost immediately. Extreme bubbling continued for 30-45 minutes. Then slowed to a bubble every 1-2 seconds from airlock.
I am fully aware that airlock activity does not necessarily mean active fermentation. This being only my 2nd wine, i'm a bit confused as to what the hell is going on.
I'm curious if I've completely messed this wine up or is everything okay and i've over reacting. Is there something i should have done differently or not at all? Thank you for taking the time to read this.
PS I tasted the wine that was left in the bottom of primary and it didn't have any crazy off flavors or jet fuel alcohol tastes. I thought it was pretty good to the taste for being so young.
Thanks
Brew-Dude