Dick
"Steve Peek" <sp...@ioa.com> wrote in message
news:GsGdnR9hnLdWFavX...@earthlink.com...
http://www.mdhb.com/product_info.php?cPath=11_14&products_id=3677
and looks like it might be useful for holding your racking cane fast while
you're distracted by the siphoning process.
Marshall
Patience. Winemaking is not a hobby for those in a hurry.
The longer you wait after adding Sparkolloid before you try to rack the wine,
the more compact (and less readily disturbed) the sediment will be. In my
experience, this is a process measured in weeks, not hours or days.
Don't try to bottle it right away, either. Rack to a second carboy, then allow
to settle again, for at least a week. Two weeks is better. *Then* bottle.
I've had similar problems with pear and quince wine. I generally just
let them settle for 6-8 months in the carboy and rack gently. On these
occasions I wonder if using filter paper would be a good idea. Rack
off 85-90% of the clear stuff, then pour the rest through a coffe
filter to get the remaining liquid separated from the solids. There
must be a reason not to do so, as I've never heard it recommended in
the last ten or twelve years that I've been making wine, but I can't
think of what it might be.
Paul
Dick
Luc
Pavel314 wrote:
If I threw some campden tablets into the wine after the filtering
would that help prevent oxidation?
Paul
>If I threw some campden tablets into the wine after the filtering
>would that help prevent oxidation?
Not nearly as well as if you add them *before* filtering.