freaky foamy frothy head on my concord?
Irene,
Reasonable levels of sulfur dioxide will not kill yeast. It only stuns wild
yeasts for a few hours. (See Zoecklein, "Wine Analysis and Production,"
page 283-286).
Adding sulfur dioxide to an ongoing fermentation is seldom desirable.
Acetaldehyde is produced in the next to last step of the fermentation
process, and the added SO2 will quickly combine with the acetaldehyde
leaving excessive amounts of acetaldehyde in the finished wine. (See
Margalit, "Concepts in Wine Chemistry," page 267.
Regards,
lum
"Irene" > wrote in message
m...
> Hi Rick,
>
> Did you use a wine yeast? If not, this is some wild strain that has
> got off to a normal start for its initial low concentration.
>
> To control the foam, stir the heck out of the must once a day (leave
> the spoon in batch in between and use a plastic bag instead of the
> lid). You should notice on the second or third day that the cap drops
> as for a normal batch of wine. Rack soon after that.
>
> I would also use a little extra bisulfite to make sure that all wild
> strains are dead in stabilizing this batch. If you are very lucky you
> will have a SUPER wine (that you will never reproduce because of those
> particular yeasts). If this one tastes good at six months keep it for
> yourself.
>
> --Irene
>
> "Rick Vanderwal" > wrote in message
>...
> > Hi,
> > started a batch of concord wine.
> > first two days were ok...
> >
> > There was a decent cap for the first 2-3 days - a very mushy cap.
> > After I removed it, then came.....THE FOAM!
> > When I kept the lid on, the foam would build and push the lid up, aside
a
> > bit,
> > and then spill out of the primary onto the floor.
> > Ugh, what a mess.......it's been doing that for 2-3 days....the way to
> > control the foam buildup is to keep the lid partly off, but then there
are
> > fruitflies.
> >
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