So my questions are...
How long (on average) can I expect it to keep on fermenting?
It's still very cloudy, will this start to clear once fermentation stops and
the yeast drops out of the liquid?
Once fermentation stops, should I transfer it to a clean demijohn while it
clears, as I'm afraid the sediment might taint the flavour?
Am I likely to need to add finings to make it go clear, or will it do this
by itself?
When/if I do transfer it to another demijohn, will it help to clear it if I
pass it through a coffee filter?
Once it's bottled, do I need to leave it in the bottles for a few weeks to
condition before drinking it, like I do with beer?
Sorry for so many questions, but this seems like a really helpfull group and
I'm still finding my feet with wine.
Cheers,
Sam.
P.S.
Have a second batch underway, only a week old, and made from elderberries
and pears - again all locally picked.
Hard to say. It will continue to ferment until there's no sugar left, or the
alcohol level rises high enough to kill the yeast. Which happens first depends
on how much sugar was present at the start, how much you added, and how
tolerant that particular strain of yeast is for high alcohol levels.
>It's still very cloudy, will this start to clear once fermentation stops and
>the yeast drops out of the liquid?
Yes.
>Once fermentation stops, should I transfer it to a clean demijohn while it
>clears, as I'm afraid the sediment might taint the flavour?
Don't wait for fermentation to stop. Do it now. Wine is generally fermented in
two stages. Primary fermentation often produces violent foaming, and is best
done in a vessel with a large headspace. Once the fermentation has quieted a
bit -- and one bubble every 27 seconds is quiet -- it should be transferred to
a smaller vessel, one with hardly any headspace. Oxygen is the enemy of good
wine; keep the exposed surface area as small as possible. Add one Campden
tablet per five gallons when you rack it to the secondary fermenter.
>Am I likely to need to add finings to make it go clear, or will it do this
>by itself?
With apples, you are certain to need pectic enzyme. You may need finings as
well; Sparkolloid works wonders.
>When/if I do transfer it to another demijohn, will it help to clear it if I
>pass it through a coffee filter?
Don't bother. Rack it now and add pectic enzyme; rack it again after three
weeks, and again after three months. Most of the sediment will have dropped
out on its own by then. Add the Sparkolloid then if you need it.
>Once it's bottled, do I need to leave it in the bottles for a few weeks to
>condition before drinking it, like I do with beer?
I would. Wine won't last forever, but it definitely improves with age.
>Sorry for so many questions, but this seems like a really helpfull group and
>I'm still finding my feet with wine.
You're welcome. I'm going to start making beer some time in the next few
months; maybe you'll be able to answer some questions for me.
>
>Cheers,
>Sam.
>
>P.S.
>Have a second batch underway, only a week old, and made from elderberries
>and pears - again all locally picked.
Hmmm... I have a batch of pear wine underway myself, started about a month
ago. It's clearing faster than I'd expected, but there's a *lot* of sediment
in the bottom of the carboy.
What Doug says. I'd rack it off into a demijohn now and let the fermentation
work itself out. Did you put all the fruit in together when you pressed it
because it sounds an interesting mix? You might want to think about getting
a few how to do it books, anything by by C.J.J. Berry is a good start.
They're simple easy to read etc.
You've reminded me I must rack off the gooseberry wine.
--
Malc
Rusted and ropy.
Dog-eared old copy.
Vintage and classic,
or just plain Jurassic:
all words to describe me.
Cheers,
My old mum makes loads of wine, and she's sending me a few books.
I kind of just jumped in at the deep end with this one, as I thought it
would be fun to go with trial and error. It may not be so much fun when I
come to taste it, LOL.
Yeah, I'm noticing that. A massive amount of sediment, and it seems to
consist of pretty large particles too.
Only one way to find out. You can always cook with it if it's bad.