Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
If typical German riesling doesn't undergo malolactic fermentation and has to be sulfured enough to kill the malolactic bacteria, is low/no sulfur German riesling basically an impossibility?
originally posted by Thor:
Assuming only residually-sugared wines in your concept of "typical German riesling" -- which isn't the case any more -- no, nothing's an impossibility. Winemakers can and do try all sort of crazy shit. That said, it seems bonkers to me, and my livelihood doesn't even depend on selling flted time bombs.
Sterile filtration, which among other things removes lactic acid bacteria.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
How else could they inhibit malos?
When I was a tyke, they thought the number was more like 14%.originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
Someone at the bar (a winemaker, I believe) told me that 17% was the magic number, but that may have been bullshit.
originally posted by SFJoe:
Wines below a certain pH (3.2?) are inhospitable to MLF bacteria, so rieslings, lots of chenin, melon, other high acid, cool climate things often just don't undergo MLF even after a long time in the cellar without SO2.
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
I heard a tale about a riesling with pH 2.82 and 20 ppm free SO2 going completely through malo on its own in a week while no one was looking.
originally posted by Arjun Mendiratta:
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
I heard a tale about a riesling with pH 2.82 and 20 ppm free SO2 going completely through malo on its own in a week while no one was looking.
Oh my; it's almost enough to make you believe in true love again...
I fear I was unclear. If there's enough rs, the bugs can eat that without resorting to the comparatively meager fare of malic acid.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Arjun Mendiratta:
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
I heard a tale about a riesling with pH 2.82 and 20 ppm free SO2 going completely through malo on its own in a week while no one was looking.
Oh my; it's almost enough to make you believe in true love again...
Actually, if I understood Joe correctly, if there's enough rs present to act as bacteria bait, malo can happen even in very low pH environment. 20 ppm is nothing, just 2 grams per liter...