Sunday, December 7, 2014

Diversion: La tres-sainte bouteille

While cruising for images on LOC...

Sunday, November 30, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 57, Nov 30 2014

Tested Betty and Charlie for acid: at or just under .75% tartaric, 4.8 ppt sulfuric.  Higher than my hopes, but at least not above the normal white range (though at the very tippy top of it).

Friday, November 28, 2014

Diversion: 187 ml capped Bay Liqueur

Decided to put the latest batch of YVB bay liqueur into 187 ml clear bottles with caps.  Picnic sized! 

Diversion: Whiskey Sour

We were going through some old binders and notebooks of recipes, and Loti came across her Grandma K's whiskey sour:

Thursday, November 27, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 54, Nov 27 2014, Thanksgiving

A week's past since our last look at the wine, and 12 days since the last post.  Clarity (almost) happens.  Definitely in range of a second racking - any time this weekend to about 2 weeks from now.  Will taste this weekend to see where the acid feels to be at.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 42, Nov 15 2014

Between 65 and 66F in the cellar at 7 AM - only 33F outside, the coldest evening and morning so far of the fall.

Tasted the Muscat from CB Alice- much less aggressively tart, but still too acidic, much rounder than it was.  I'm thinking we did go through some malolactic conversion.  Color very good in the sample, yellow, though still not clear in the CB.

Did a quick Titrette test and was surprised to see it come back at 15 or 16 ppm.  Was expecting it to be considerably higher since the addition made on Nov 1.  Might check again soon but will take the sample from deeper in the CB.  This morning's sample was scootched off the very top of the neck with a 5 ml dropper.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 38, Nov 11 2014

Continued lightening, still translucent, completely still to the eye.  Colors of Raisin and Muscat are much closer now, with Raisin becoming more yellow, less orange.

Second racking in 2013 was on day 71, and one of the things that surprised me was that what looked like an almost dusty surface to the lees was actually potassium bitartrate crystals.  Looks to me that the lees we have now, at least seeing them through the glass and the suspensions, are very similar.  Totally good with me.  Bring the acid down a bit?  I should get a track on the temperatures down there.

That 2013 that 2nd racking was the last before bottling and we had good clarity in the finished wine.  Follow the same path?

Listened yesterday to Levi Dalton's interview of Larry Turley.  A couple small things reminded me of what we've seen or done.  He keeps the softer raisins in the wine and only discards the hard ones.  (Though he's talking Zin.)

Sunday, November 2, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 29, Nov 2 2014

The wine's moved from opaque to translucent - not wildly so, but definitely so.  The fewest, finest bubbles here and there in two of the CBs, and none at all that I see in CB Alice.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 28, Nov 1 2014

Listened yesterday to Levi Dalton's interview of Jerome Prevost, who is thought to make some of the very good champagnes of the world.  At one point Dalton asks Prevost if he puts his wine through malolactic fermentation.    His answer made me feel good. It's episode 210 at I'll Drink to That.

Action in the wine has slowed tremendously (and leaves me wondering whether the wine had gone through malolactic fermentation or not), a constant lazy bubble here and there, but not the steady fine streams of a week ago.

Titrette tests are 13/14 ppm and so I've added 1 ml 10% solution per gallon to the wine, figuring this to raise things by about 15 ppm, then gave everything a good stirring.  Will check levels before the next racking, and if we think we want the level to be higher we'll do the proper thing and add the solution to the receiving CB so it gets properly mixed in.

I also took a much closer look this morning at parts of a book JG gave us a couple of years ago, Let's Make Wine, authored by his cousin Vince Emilio.  The subtitle is An Anthology of Winemaking Instructions, and it is in fact a really good collection.  Best advice and charts lifted from here, there and everywhere combined with personal experience. Better organized than some of my favorite other sources.

Monday, October 27, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 23, Oct 27 2014

Little Raisin, Big Muscat
Pretty good look at the difference in color between the main Muscat and the little Raisin.

In 2013 is was day 35 when I posted that "lemon light" was shining through the wine.  Just a couple of weeks away...

Sunday, October 26, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 22, Oct 26 2014

0800:
Gratifyingly little sediment since coming off the gross lees on day 15.  Still a fine gassing off in the CBs, not enough to see a bubbler move in 10 minutes of staring, but easy to see.  Malo?  We haven't done any testing for malolactic acid and the wine is pretty low in SO2 and the cellar isn't cold, so it's real possible.

Raisin is still.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 19, Oct 23 2014

2200:
Mit bung.
Replaced the cb covers with drilled stoppers and airlocks.  That addresses my worries about the caps not being quite air tight once CO2 stops, and feeds my paranoia about popping bungs.  Golly.

Took the little Raisin off of the gross lees: now have one full gallon of it.

How much CO2 and other gas is still getting blown off?  Here's CB Charley on video.  (Not a very steady hand.)

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 17, Oct 21 2014

0600:
Color shift .
This pic gives an idea of the color shift as settling happens in the wine, about 36 hours after coming off the gross lees.

Took no measurements this morning but calibrated the pH meter for use when things are a little more settled.

2100:
pH of CB Charley is 3.92.  Reading of pressed juice on day 1 was 4.3, but that was also an uncalibrated meter.

And in the evening...
This second pic shows how much more settling and color shift there's been in the last 15 hours.  Pic was taken with a flash, so the colors aren't the same as in this morning's pic, but you can see that the settling has moved nearly to the bottom of the CB.

Monday, October 20, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 16, Oct 20 2014

0600:
All 3 CBs sending up bubbles in a very different way then when they came off the lees, many fewer of them and larger and more distinct than the steady stream of fine bubbles before.  Not enough to move the airlocks.  And the top gallon or so of each CB is starting to clarify - not nearly to the point of seeing through but not so opaque with floating particles as the rest of the wine.

Quick Titrette test, looks like under 15 ppm - want to test the pH before making any addition.  Quick acid test looked off the chart - let's mark that down to early morning user error and try again later.  (Used carboy B for these tests.)

2100:
Peace and love in the cellar.  The color change has extended down another four inches in each CB.  Shining a light through the backs of the necks makes a beautiful, hypnotic little show of the bubbles.  Wish you were here.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 15, Oct 19 2014

1100:
Two of the bigboys are bubbling in the 25 to 30 second range.  The third seems to be in Bartleby mode.

Gave some thought to how long to leave things on the gross lees: not going to do anything extended.  Will rack soon.

1800:
Off the gross lees!

Earlier in the day we decided not to go to Homebrew to pick up Clinitest tablets because, after all, I'm not nuts about color scale tests.  When we used to do lots of Accuvin testing it felt good to do, but judging the color shifts is so subjective that it always left me wondering what the right result was and whether I was seeing what I wanted to see.  So we didn't go to buy tablets today, but in the early evening I was kicking around the cellar and found a stash I must have bought last year.  Used them and my eyes said we're between 0.1% and 0.2%

About an inch of gross lees.
So, all doubting aside, it still managed to reinforce my desire to rack off the gross lees, and we did.

We went from 5+5+5+1+1 where both of the one gal jugs were very heavy on lees - one of them was about half lees - to 5+5+5+1-liter.  Doesn't sound so different than last year, but last year we got the 5+5+5 by topping with a lot of the prior year's wine.

How's it seem?  I thought the first CB (now labeled "A") had a bit of bret aroma when I was racking it and I'm still a bot worried about it - this though the lees themselves didn't give off any barnyard smell at all.  B&C were fresh and sweet smelling.

All three CBs had about the same quantity of lees - the picture here is of the middle CB, which had the middling amount.  The book next to the CB is about an inch thick.

Friday, October 17, 2014

2014 Muscat day 13, Oct 17, 2014

Rereading Iverson this morning, while hanging out with the CBs and having my coffee.
  • Zero Brix usually indicates about 2% remaining residual sugar.
  • Clinitest .2% or .1% is what he considers dry.
  • He changes from airlocks to solid bungs at this point, but also watches for them to pop out, just in case.  (I hate that.  It's happened to us and was why I first picked bought caps.)
  • He comes off the gross lees three to four weeks after dry.
Still very visible but very fine CO2 production in the carboys.  Jugs much less so.  Will pick up fresh Clinitest tablets this weekend.  Follow last year's pattern, or stay longer on the lees?


Evening.  The CB's are popping in the 5 to 8 second range.  The gallons in the mind-wandering +1 minute per pop range.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 11, October 15 2014

0600:
You know that sound that isn't snoring, it's just that single sleeping glottal keh that comes after an breathing out and at the start of breathing in?  All of the carboys are doing it, about every three seconds.  It's very peaceful.  Like being in a nursery at nap time.

Steady flow of very fine CO2.  A good deal warmer outside yesterday and last evening than the day before, but the temp of the juice is steady.  The usual custard color for this stage.

Something about the carboy caps: they sometimes let the CO2 escape from a less than perfect seating against the neck of the CB.  When you see one CB that's not keeping the same time as the others, if you press the cap down, it will join in.  OK at this stage, but what about when things go still?  I haven't seen any discussion of this.  I do think I once saw a reference to someone using some sort of gel inside the cap for a seal (saw that once, and nothing more specific).  Switch back to rubber stoppers?  Just stop worrying?

1945:
Hike!  -0.6 Brix in the first-filled 5 gal CB.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 10, Oct 14 2014

0600:
Still gentle fermentation happening.

I noticed that there's an insane amount of lees in the two 1 gallon jugs - these were filled from the dregs of the primary tank, while all three of the 5 gallon CBs were siphoned off cleanly.  I'll be happy if we have three full CBs without topping off with prior years' wine after the first racking.  Last year we came off the gross lees on day 15, and we lost about 1.5 liters to the lees in each of the 5 gal CBs.  Topping was done with some overflow we had in a growler, but also 2.75 liters of the 2011 Muscat.

I haven't wanted to get 6 gal or 6.5 gal CBs because lifting the 5 gals is enough of a bear, but it would have been nice to have had all the juice go into large containers together.  For that matter, maybe we should rehabilitate the 100 liter floating lid steel tank: I don't trust it for long term aging, but it would have been fine for this phase.

Took a quick reading of the Raisin with the long scale hydrometer since it fits right into the jug without spilling - 3 Brix.

Monday, October 13, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 9, October 14

0700:
All is well.  The gallon jugs fouled their bubblers again - they are a little overfilled.  Cleaned them and found that each had a grapeskin and a pip or two in their necks.  The CBs look very good.  Still steady CO2 pumping in all.  Didn't take careful measurement, but the tape thermometer says 70.  Will test Brix this evening.

2000:
Juice +69F, Brix 0.6.
Yeasts don't fail me now!

That would be a theoretical 15.3% alcohol, and the little fellers are still working - much more slowly & quietly and gently, but still working and lifting the bubbler every now and then.  They no a dead yet.

One of the gallon bubblers was fouled and I cleaned it.  The level of the juice in each has dropped considerably in the neck - I'm assuming that's from gassing out.

The taste?  Pretty close to wine and very much less rough than a few days ago - it's going to be pretty acidic but it doesn't have the bite from earlier on in the fermentation.  I don't think I'll bother to test for acid until ferment has stilled and the wine starts to clarify - maybe after racking it off the gross lees.

Didn't do any testing in Raisin.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 8, Oct 12, 2014

0700:
Brix Muscat 3.15.  Brix Raisin 8.

There's not so much fizz that I can't consolidate the Muscat today.  I'm pretty sure that I'll wind up 5+5+5+1+1, which is a little bit of a drag - I'd love to have those last two combined.  I'll check with Brooklyn Homebrew later today to see if they have anything like a 2 gallon jug.

1800:
5+5+5+1+1 condensed Muscat
Et voila.  Condensed the Muscat into 5+5+5+1+1, as expected.  Very happy with that - it puts us about a gallon and a half ahead of where we were last year at this point.  Plus we have a gallon+ of Raisin, if it's not poison.

There's something very beautiful about the rush of CO2 bubbles up the slope and neck of the carboys at this stage of the wine.  Really I can sit there and watch it for a very long time.

2000:
The bubblers on the two 1 gallon jugs were fouled with foam and juice.  Cleaned and reset.  Everything else is well behaved.

Late this morning I hiked over to Brooklyn Homebrew and picked up some buffer solution to calibrate the pH meter, some drilled #2 stoppers so I can put a bubbler in a 750 ml bottle, an adhesive thermometer because I'd never used one before and wondered whether they are reliable, a grease pencil to see if it would work on carboys, and a "sanitary air filter" which is the gizmo that I blow into on the siphon device I use to rack out of carboys.

Haven't calibrated the meter yet, but a stopper's in the Raisin spillover, the thermometer is reading accurately enough adhered to a CB and makes me want to test it next year on the 100 liter tank for the white wine, the grease pencil works only so so on the carboys (maybe because they aren't quite dry?).

Saturday, October 11, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 7, Oct 11 2014

0600:
Room 69.5F, juice 69.5F, Brix 6.
White foam this morning.  Not brown.

Fizzing much gentler, the foam is now all white rather than brown.  Likely alc content is probably up to 12.3%.  Seems likely that I'll go to carboys today/tonight.  Decided to not add any ice - the room temp isn't likely to rise today (cooler and rainy out, 56F now) and I don't think the juice will be throwing off much heat.  But will check again in a few hours: if the temp has risen will add an ice bat.

The curve in this chart isn't exactly right - the time between readings varied between 9 and 13 hours - but you get the idea.  Wait wait wait WHOOSH woah woah...  The dream remains that one year we'll really suppress the temp of the ferment and turn the whoosh phase into a pleasant glide.

OK, one more time, Brix against the temp of the juice.


Only took a quick look at Raisin - small pebbly white foam.  No measurements.

1800:
Room 69, Juice 71, Brix read around 3.5 on the regular hydrometer, so I pulled out the short scale hydrometer and got a reading closer to 5.

Close enough for jazz!  I made the decision to move from the tank to carboys, leaving a few liters open at the top of each so things can foam up without fouling the airlocks.  Will condense everything when we're closer to zero Brix.  We're in three 5 gallon CBs and one 3 gal.  When we top up we'll likely be 3x5+1+1.  There's a fair amount of mud in the 3 gal, and that's get distributed.  In 2013 we moved from the tank to carboys on day 7, too (3x5+1), at just about the same Brix.

I also moved the Raisin from the bucket it was in to a 1 gal and some spillover that I have in a 1 liter now, but might come close to filling a 500 or 375 - and as I do every year I think, Oh, yeah, have to buy some bored stoppers for plain bottles.  Everything is pumping away nicely.

Friday, October 10, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 6, Oct 10 2014

0600:
Room 69F, juice 73F, Brix 10.
Likely alcohol content of juice now 10%.

Still lots of foam and audible fizz under it, still very slimy yeast, but no bubbler action.  Down 3 Brix in the last 11.5 hours so it slowed from yesterday's crazy pace.  But the juice is still warmer than in any day of 2013.

Swapped the bat and 2 blocks for 4 blocks - the bat wasn't frozen through (neither was the last one I put in last night).

The little Raisin is very fizzy, very dark in color.  Will taste it this evening.

And, no, this isn't about the temperature of the juice, but it looks like brother winemaker Pietro was up at Gracie Mansion celebrating Italian Heritage Day with that tall guy who usually comes to our yearly new wine & puttanesca party.  Begorah!

Winemaker Magazine's yeast chart tells a slightly better story for us than Lalvin's tear-sheet.  Lalvin lists ideal temps.  WM states that the yeast's upper temp range is 86F.

1730:
Room 69, juice 72, Brix 7.5.
Bubbler propped up but not pumping, lots of fizz, lots of yeast smell in the air.  Lots of foam and yeast is very slimy.  Swapped the 3 or 4 packs that were in there for a bat and 3 packs.  asted the juice (now at a likely 12.4% alc.), still fresh fruit and sweet, but with a tart/sour thing going on at the sides and back of the tongue.

112 hours into the fermentation.  When we cross the line to 5 brix I'll likely go into carboys unless the CO2 production seems very heavy - maybe even if it is.  Last year we went to carboys at 4.5 Brix and consolidated / topped those off when we went to 0.9 Brix.  Of course, we're hoping that the high Brix / high alcohol this year doesn't cause fermentation to crap out before then.

And what about poor Raisin?  Much to my surprise it's at 16 Brix, going at a more leisurely rate than the main Muscat.  72F.  Fizzy sounding, not fuzzy looking.  Actually looks like it could go into  jug without hurting itself.

And then, at 2100, I decided to hydrate 1 gram of Fermaid-K in distilled water and add it to the Raisin.  Would be a shame if it pooped out.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 5 October 9, 2014

0530:
Room 70, juice 74.5, Brix 18.5.

Dropped 5 Brix in the last 9 hours.  A total of 9.5 Brix since yeasting, 78 hours ago.  Roughly 50% of the fermentation so far has taken place in the last 10% of the time.

I guess this qualifies as out of control?  Say goodbye, volatile monoterpenes.

Got downstairs and the bubbler was practically tossed from the tank with a steady, heavy chain of big CO2 bubblers plopping up through it.

Closest temp to this I have in the last few years of Muscat making was 74F in day 6 of 2012 when the juice was down to 5 Brix, but the room was also 74 degrees.  This is also the highest I've seen the temp of the white juice go above the temp of the room.  In 2013 the temp of the juice never exceeded the temp of the room.

Swapped all the packs and bats.  Note to self: be prepared to double-up on the bats next year.  Vidi below gives you an idea of the fizz happening right now.  Turn up the volume.  The blue things in the tank are the bat and icepacks.


1830:
Room 69F, juice 75F, Brix 13.

House was in high aroma when I walked in.  Going downstairs I worried that I detected a little barnyard on the bouquet - but tasting the juice - dark, fizzy, apple-ish and probably 10% alcohol at this stage - gave me nothing but deliciousness.

The foam is back, way back.
Still, what the heck is happening!  Heavy foam is back and the yeast is in that super-slimy state, coating everything (including the white jeans I wore - dope).

Replaced as much ice as I could, but the big bat hadn't quite frozen through.  I might take the temp again in just a couple of hours, just to see what the short term effect of icing is.  If it does push the juice down, we can consider... what, staying home from work for a week next year and swapping massive quantities of icepacks in and out every two hours?  Or maybe it's time to seriously consider a cooling coil?  (Not likely.)  Ah, to envy the big boys.

Anyway, a drop of 5 Brix in 5 hours, followed by a drop of 5.5 in 13 hours.  It ain't going to last forever.

2030:
I did check the juice temp - down 3 degrees in the last 2 hours.  The icepacks are effective, if only for a short time.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 4, Oct 8, 2014

0700:
Room 70F, juice 68F, Brix 26.

Loud fizzing, little or no foam.  Not moving the bubbler.  Replaced paddle and pack.

Like yesterday the outside temp will be around 70 today, then cooler tomorrow and cooler yet the day after - any little ambient temperature drop we can get will be nice.

57.5 hours since adding the yeast and a total Brix drop of 2 (about 7%).  Last year it took 36.5 hours from inoculation to drop 2 Brix - that was from 23 to 21 (9%).  The description of the CO2 action in the juice both years at the 2 Brix drop is identical.  So this year is a slower start, from a much higher Brix, but when the yeast has eaten an identical amount of sugar the juice / fermentation looks and sounds the same.

Swapped the ice pack in Raisin, no measurements.  Foam and fizz.

1830:
Walked into the house and was totally assaulted with the smell of sticky juice fermenting.  Woah!  turned on the exhaust fan in the cellar that we installed in our first winemaking year with Bernardo - 2006.

Room 71F, Juice 72F, Brix 23.5.
Heavy fizz!  Scary temp!  swapped the bat for another, and the ice pack for 2.  The warmest I  measured the juice last year was 71F.  In 2012, though, it was between 72 and 74 for three days running.  Of course, last year was much better wine than 2012.

Swapped the ice pack in Raisin a few hours later.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

2014 Muscat, day 3, Oct 7 2014

0600:
Room 69F, juice 65F, Brix 27.5.
Raisin 64F.

+32 hours since adding yeast, slightest budge in sugar.  I underestimated the CO2 production and stuck my face in the tank to smell the must and quickly got the classic gasp and tingles.  Replaced the ice paddle.

Raisin at 64F, no other measurements taken.  More yeast froth than last evening but still nowhere near the main juice.  Replaced the ice pack.


Potential alcohol: just checked the reference books.  Setting aside a bazillion other factors, 0.56 is the multiplier to determine potential alcohol from the starting Brix level.  Potential 15.68%, which seems so insane as to make me hope we don't reach our potential.

Oh, and here's something interesting to worry about: ICV-D47, the yeast we're using, has an "average alcohol tolerance up to 14%".  Mommy!  Might we end up with something high alcohol, high acid, and off dry?

Alison Crowe says:
Estimating potential alcohol is tough, even for veteran winemakers. Things like yeast strain, fermentation temperature and dried up grapes can make it hard to first get an accurate initial Brix reading and to subsequently translate an initial Brix reading into final alcohol. Though in a lab we may say that for every degree Brix you'll get X amount of ethanol, in reality it's never that simple. You can certainly help yourself, though, by only using your hydrometer to help you calculate potential alcohol at the beginning of the fermentation, where it will most accurately reflect what you'll be getting from the sugar in your juice or must.

2100:
Room 70F, juice 68F, Brix 26.5.

The heavy foam has broken up into something more like curds and there is very active carbonation rising up through the juice.  Temp is at the top of D47's happy range, so I replaced the ice paddle & added an ice pack.  (Room and juice temps this evening are where they were in the morning of day 3 last year.)

Raisin is turning from foam to curd, too, but is much less active.  I changed the ice pack.

Monday, October 6, 2014

2014 Muscat, Day 2, Oct 6 2014

0800:
Cellar is 68 F and the juice 63 F - hasn’t yet warmed to the room’s temp, but up 5 degrees in the last 10 hours.  Last year, the morning after yeast the room was the 70F and the wine 68F - all in all a cooler start this year, maybe all do to it being so much cooler on crush day this year.

Yeast is starting to colonize in masses on the surface, but no fizzing or visual action yet.  Won’t bother with any other readings until things are further along (except maybe acid tonight - just like last year I am nervous about having made an adjustment).  If we track to 2013's curve, there might be enough temp rise late today to start cooling the must, and tomorrow night there will be "foam as thick as a shag carpet".

A little more about yesterday.
Just as in 2013, the destemmer was jammed when we first tried to use it.  Removed the cover from the fan belt and chain assembly and was again able to free the works by rocking and then rotating the pulley by hand.  This evening I’ll disassemble it again and lubricate things with mineral oil.

1830:
Room 68.5 F, must 65 F, SO2 ~15ppm, acid tartaric somewhere between .625 and .800.

Yeast action, in main Muscat, about 24 hours in.
Only 2F rise in temp the last 10 hours, but I went ahead and added an ice paddle given how active the yeast seemed to be - fully covering the surface, the starting of hiss but not nearly enough CO2 to pop the bubbler.  (I also bought another paddle today - we lost 2 of them to an ice cooler bio-hazard of par-boiled pasta from the June puttanesca party that I found in the cellar in August.)  D47 yeast is happiest 59F to 68F.  Go down, Moses.

The juice is still completely cloudy, so titrette and acid readings aren't so clear.  SO2 looked to be a good deal lower than I was shooting for (though a good deal higher than the plain juice, and given how quickly the fermentation is starting, it's all good in my view).  Acid is harder to read than the SO2 and I really can't say whether I had a full color change at 2.5 ml HCl or 2.8 or somewhere inbetween.  My aim was to get us to .65 and not above .75.  Will test a few times as fermentation progresses.  I've also just read that the titration color change happens when the sample hits 8.2 pH - so in theory I could check for the levels with our pH meter instead of visually.  Oy.

Raisin-stomp is not so far along.
I took no readings from Muscat 2, our raisin stomp.  Maybe I should add a little cooling to it, though.


I've added Mihai & colleen's pics from yesterday to a slideshow in the right hand margin.

Sunday, October 5, 2014

2014 Muscat, Day 1, Oct 5 2014

0700
Temp outside is 47 F, chilliest morning of the young autumn so far and the first time we've had cool weather on winemaking day in a years.

It's also the latest date we've started Muscat: 2009 9/26, 2010 9/25/, 2011 9/24, 2012 9/29, 2013 9/22).  Last year was the earliest, which maybe makes this year feel all the later.

19:30
Brix +28, juice temp 58.5F, acid 4.5 tartaric, pH 4.3.
Wow!  What a day.  Mihai & Colleen got here first, then Jon, then Helen & Mike, then it's a jumble - Peter, James, Doyle, Michael & Kelly & Nate, Mike & Pam & Carmello, Judy & Danny & Lief... Lots of other folks stopping.

We set up two sorting tables - one in the yard and one on the sidewalk, and we used one of our 50 gallons fermenting drums to hold the sorted grapes until we were ready to press.  Tony Pagano told us yesterday that the grapes were at 28 Brix and I was doubtful, but it was exactly what I was seeing on the refractometer while we worked.  At some point Mihai and I decided not to press while the sorting was going on because we would have to use the wash-up hose for the bladder - turned out to be a mistake in that it stretched the work out for a couple of hours longer than if we pressed (as we usually do) while sorting.
One of Mihai's pics of the sidewalk sorting table - Peter, Jon & Lori.

I think we have the process of using the bladder press down now.  Next year we might elevate it a bit to make the gauge more accessible, we'll know what combination of hoses to have ready, and we'll get a Y splitter so we can press and still have a hose for washing.

Our yield was about 66 liters of juice - more than the last two years but less than 2012 and 11.  Given the condition of the grapes I don't know whether the new press helped get us a better yield, but it's nicer to use - easier for everyone to get a hand in.

At 7:30 or so we tested the juice.  Brix was where we now expected it to be, whopping high.  Acid was correspondingly whopping low - .45 tartaric, and we decided to raise it just as we did last year, to a target .65.  Using the rule of 1 g/l to raise it 1% we uses 2 g/l for 66 liters - 122 g.  That seemed like a heck of a lot, but I went with it.

Also tested for free S02, which was nowhere in sight, and using the rule of .53ml per liter to impart 30 ppm, we added 35ml for the 66 liters.

Then we hydrated the D47 and pitched it in.

During the course of the day Doyle and Peter asked and prodded about doing something with all of the raisened and bruised fruit.  At first I thought we might ferment them on their skins, but then we changed gears, ran them through the destemmer, pressed them, and put the juice (there's only 5 liters of it) into their own container to ferment.  We added appropriate amounts meta, tartaric, and yeast using the same rules as the main wine, though I did not take separate measurements.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

2014 Muscat, day zero

At about 3 Mike, Peter and I headed over to terminal market for 500# of Muscat Alexandria.  First stop was Lapide, where there were lots and lots of bees on the grapes, which I guess is a nice sign sugar-wise, but maybe they were there because the grapes were so beat up looking - rougher than any of us recall from past years.  Maybe the downside of buying so late?  We dithered, shuffled, chatted with the head man about Malvasia, took a walk...

504 pounds of Muscat Alexandria about to be wrapped.
... and looked in at Pagano.  What we saw wasn't all that much more enticing, but was enhanced by the senior Tony Pagano (92 years old) regaling us with stories.  We bit.  12 cases, 504# of Muscat, which we brought back to the house and got under a tarp.  (The day started with heavy rains but they were over by now.)  Mihai and Colleen were waiting for us when we pulled up and Lori came out, too - very quick work.

Mike took off, the rest of us went out back so Mihai could check out the new press - we made him chief engineer for tomorrow.  Poked and prodded, decided to see how the hosing attached, filled the bladder and drained it and started putting together a plan of how things might work tomorrow.

We've already decided to put the destemmed grapes into a holding tank before the press, so things might flow as easily as possible and also so we might do a little hand crushing before pressing - we'll see.

Haven't tested the sugar level of the grapes yet - the boss at Lapide said 26 brix.  We'll see in the morning.  Sleep well, garapies!

Sunday, September 14, 2014

2014 doesn't begin!!

Well.  After rushing like nuts to let everyone know we were making wine on short notice Mike & Lori & I got to terminal market only to be told by both Lapide and Pagano that, no, there are no Muscat grapes in yet and won't be any until later this week.  We told one of the senior guys at Lapide that we'd called from (from Prague) a few days ago to be sure and he was upset that we'd been misled, told us always to ask for the sales guys, etc.  When we wandered over to Pagano (who we hadn't called) the senior and son were there, had a nice chat.

After we got home we took a long hard look at the calendar and saw that because of travel schedules and whatnot if we made Muscat next weekend on the 20th or 21st we wouldn't be able to be here on day 7, when we usually come out of the large fermenter and into 90% filled carboys, or day 9 when we usually top up the carboys.  If we threw the day 9 step at Mihai & Colleen, (who are ready, willing and able) we'd still have to come out of the primary a couple of days early and that would mean giving up temperature control of the fermentation while things were still going pretty hot and heavy.

So we called both suppliers to ask if they'd still be getting in Muscat later and have it on hand for the weekend of October 4 & 5.  Yes.  OK, that's the target.  Rain or shine.  Tent if raining.  Weeping and gnashing of teeth if it turns out all the Muscat is gone.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

2014 begins!

We've decided to jam the white winemaking in between two trips, and with the early harvest that means we have to start... today.  We'll buy the usual Muscat Alexandria from either Lapide or TPS and let them sit overnight - same as we did last year.  Last night we were able to pick up some Lalvin ICV D47 yeast from Brooklyn Home Brew - also the same that Mike chose last year.  We also picked up fresh chemicals for acid testing, a small amount of tartaric acid in case we want to make the same adjustment as last year, and a clean hydrometer testing tube.

And we'll be using the new bladder press!  Woo hoo!

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Pressing good news!

Psych!!
Hello Steve,
Thank you for the email. Our east coast warehouse has just received the bladder presses, so they should be shipping out over the the next 1-2 days.
Please email or call with any questions or concerns.
Thank you,
...
MoreFlavor! Inc

Monday, August 11, 2014

August 8 Lanza brix teaser

Lanza and Lanza-Musto Vineyards brix Readings 8/8

  • Cab Sav, Valley – 16.5
  • Cab Sav 169 clone – 16.0
  • Cab Sav Koch – 15.5
  • Chardonnay – 18.5
  • Barbara – 17.5
  • Gamay Noir – 15.
  • Malbec – 15.5
  • Merlot – 16.
  • Mouvedre – 15.
  • Muscat Canelli 19.5
  • Pinot Noir – 19.
  • Petite Syrah – 17.5
  • Petite Verdot – 18.
  • Primativo – 18.5
  • Sangiovese – 18.
  • Sav Blanc – 21.5
  • Syrah – 17.
  • Zinfandel – 18.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Slowly turning our attention toward 2014 grapes

M&M has been sending the occasional alerts.  Morewine hasn't shipped the new press yet.  We haven't given serious thought to what we might make, or even whether we'll be able to make, given our current schedules.

But yesterday I took a walk to Brooklyn Homebrew's new digs on 20th Street and came away with some fresh titrets, meta, a little in-line plastic ball-valve that might be nice for bottling (rather than pinching the tube), and a hand-capper and caps (to satisfy my urge to occasionally do a few small and odd-sized little picnic bottles of wine).   The guys at Homebrew let me know that they can have any of the Wyeth yeasts given a week's notice.

We also seriously still need to find time to blend and bottle the 2012 Merlot & Cab Franc.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

And a Muscat label for the party...

Well, I got to recycle part f the image I wanted to use for last year's party invite, which had a naked Bachus version of James Guido astride the barrel.  Waste not, want not.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

The thrillah from Zillah

Thanks, Two Mountain and M&M, for the grapes.  Yummy.  Maybe this is the label we'll use for the little bit that we've bottled for the June party.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Last of the 2013 white, and first of the 2012 red bottled

Mike came over and we bottled the last cb of the 2013 Muscat.  This was the one we had topped off using glass beads rather than other wines.  Worked well - going to clean the beads in a jelly sack in the dishwasher.

I also bottled a 3 gallon batch of the 2012 Merlot so we'll have some recent red for the June new wine party.   While cleaning up I discovered that we have 8 gallons of the 2012 Cab Franc, not the 3 or 5 I imagined.  And we have 14 more gallons of the Merlot.  Going to be a whole lot of blending and bottling going on when we finally get to it.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Diversion: shrubs, etc.

Saturday the 19th we bottled another carboy of Muscat - one to go, and I imagine that one will go straight into PG-S' summer-fun trove.

This evening I strained and sweetened two shrubs - one is sour cherry, the other is rhubarb.  I froze the fruit for both last summer.  This seemed like a good way to clear the freezer before fresh fruit starts coming in.  The fruit macerated in champagne vinegar for a week.  Should be ready to try in a week or two, but I corked the bottles and will try to hang on to them until the weather is really warm.

While I was storing the bottled shrubs I came across two 750 ml bottles of sage liqueur and a single 750 of the Yvette von Boven citrus based vermouth I made last year.  Buried treasure!

Sunday, April 13, 2014

2012 reds, tasted and thinking about blending

We tasted the 2012 Yakima Merlot and the CA Cab Franc.  Hopefully Lori will add her notes.  Unbelievable color in the Merlot - it was three weeks in primary fermentation.  Neither has a striking nose but both taste more complex than you'd think - maybe especially the CF.

We did a quicky blend- 89% Merlot, 20% Cab F, and that was nicer than either wine alone.  We're thinking May might be a good time to have a few people come and do some real testing with us and then bottle all 17 gallons of it.  (I feel like I might have hidden more of the Merlot somewhere... but where?)

Very happy with how the Merlot has kept in the Fusti and how the CF has kept with the silicon bung in the carboy.  Wondering (as usual) if I should have been more aggressive with Meta for both: now would be a good time to catch up on that.

2013 Muscat, day 206: first bottling!

Good morning, winemakers!

We bottled the first couple of cases of 2013 Muscat today.  Levels were good and we added no meta.  Zippy compared to the last couple of years, but then we did add a tad of tartaric acid early on.  I feel a little guilty about it, but then we didn't grow the grapes and they traveled who knows how long from the west coast and were stored for who knows how long at terminal market before they got to us.

More potassium bitartrate crystals in the CB - not nearly so much as at the last racking - and virtually no lees.

We intended to bottle 2 more cases but found that a lot of the stored empty's had crud, bugs or black mold in them - very disappointing.  New house rule: no empy's get stored without a power washing and meta dip.  I've scrounged around and come up with another couple of cases worth - might still get another carboy done today or tomorrow, and that'll leave us with one more.

Corked bottle
While bottling we had a mis-hap that we hadn't seen before - Lori put a second cork into an already corked bottle.  I heard her saying, Boy, this one is tougher than all the others...