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WINEMAKING SUPPLIES, GRAPES and JUICE 
for amateur winemakers. 
Fall Bright, The Winemakers Shoppe, 10110 Hyatt Hill, Dundee, NY 14837

HOURS: We are open all year round!  We have always been closed on Mondays.

November to May 31: Tues-Fri:  10-5  Eastern Time   Weekends (Saturday or Sunday) by appointment 607-292-3995 
June to harvest  Tues-Fri : 10-5  Saturday 10-4    Eastern Time 

Harvest (Sept-Oct):  Tuesday to Sunday 10-5 Eastern Time

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Adding Sorbate
Cold Stabilizing

Bottling a Sweet Wine

 

My wine has "fallen bright" and hasn't bubbled in a long time.  It taste slightly sweet, can I bottle it now?

   Potassium Sorbate kills yeast and is used as a preservative for sweet wine. 

Test the sugar level, using a -5 to +5 hydrometer.  If the reading is below a -1.5 degrees or -2 degrees brix, then the wine is dry and safe to bottle without sorbate.  If the hydrometer reading is higher than a -1.5, such as a 0 reading or a plus 1 degrees, then there is residual sugar.  If you add sugar to sweeten to taste, use cane sugar instead of corn sugar.  Calorie for calorie there is twice the taste of sweetness with cane sugar.  Red or white wine with residual sugar should be treated with sorbate prior to bottling.

Your wine should be brilliant, having fallen bright.   Test the SO2 level of the stuck wine with a Titret SO2 test kit.  It should be above 80 ppm.   If needed, dose the metabisulfite to 40 ppm at the same time you do the sorbate.  NOTE:  If you do not have proper K Metabisulfite levels at this time and any malolactic bacteria are present, it will consume the Sorbate.  The result is an off taste and an odor of geraniums for which there is no fix.  ADD SORBATE, at the rate of 1-2 grams per gallon: 1/2 teaspoon is approximately 1 gram.    The density of sorbate is different from one supplier to the next.  If you do not have a gram scale, you should probably dose at the higher rate of 2 grams per gallon, which would be approximately 1 teaspoon per gallon. 

Now, you can cold stabilize. Put glycerin or sufficient alcohol (vodka) in the airlock to prevent freezing.  Place the carboy at 20-25o F for 2 weeks or more. Excess tartrates will precipitate from the wine. This mellows the wine by reducing the acid. It will help stabilize the wine by preventing these tartrates from settling out after bottling. Rack into a clean carboy while cold, adding  proper metabisulfite.  Top up with wine.  If you don't have time to rack while still cold, it is ok.  The crystallization of the tartaric acid will not reverse.

If you add SORBATE without cold stabilizing, allow 24 hours before bottling. However, the addition of any potassium ion will make the wine unstable and this is why cold stabilization is recommended after adding sorbate.

If you do not want to use sorbate and have a sweet wine to bottle, use pressure safe bottles such as champagne or beer bottles.   The residual sugar should be 2% or a difference of 1.000 on the +5-5 hydrometer. 

Filter if desired and bottle when stable.  Always rinse bottles with C Brite or a meta solution.  


 

       
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Fall Bright, The Winemakers Shoppe    Tom and Marcy Mitchell
10110 Hyatt Hill    Dundee, NY  14837
Phone: 607-292-3995       E-mail :winemaking@fallbright.com 
Some pictures complements of Steve Shanker    Steve Shanker's Winemaking Lesson site, 

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Revised: August 08, 2008