Kay Bixler
Kay Bixler
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
God only knows exactly what's in Ferms-A-Lot), etc.
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There's even a Kosher version!
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
God only knows exactly what's in Ferms-A-Lot), etc.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
"Cheating" is a funny word and I think you're being too arch.originally posted by Aaron:
But it's still cheating.
I don't think anyone here is arguing that the wines should make themselves. I'm concerned about how many interventions, how many additions (and of what... sugar is pretty ordinary, God only knows exactly what's in Ferms-A-Lot), etc.
That is one balanced and nutritious diet!originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
God only knows exactly what's in Ferms-A-Lot), etc.
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But not for Passover!originally posted by Kay Bixler:
There's even a Kosher version!
originally posted by SFJoe:
I think that is old information.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
It's my understanding that naturally occurring yeast tends to die naturally, thus ending fermentation regardless of the sugar content of the wine, at somewhere around 14% alcohol.
More later.
I think it was never true. Sure, you'll have more stuck fermentations the higher in brix you start, OTBE. But people did ferment warm vintages of Chateauneuf with native yeasts in the old days, and still do, AFAIK.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Because it was never true or because, as I said, yeast has evolved?
'Pretty to think so.originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
My great-great-grandmother would recognize sugar. Go ahead and add it.
My great-great-grandmother would not recognize ammonia salts (DAP), free amino acids (organic nitrogen derived from inactivated yeast), sterols, unsaturated fatty acids, key nutrients (magnesium sulfate, thiamin, folic acid, niacin, biotin, calcium pantothenate), etc. Do not add it.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Let me try again: I do not agree with you that there should be no additions. It is perfectly reasonable to say that some additions are good and some additions are bad. So, I do not see hypocrisy because I do not hold the all or nothing position.
originally posted by VS:
I grow six grape varieties. Of these, syrah and garnacha are regularly between 14.5% and 15% alc, bobal and monastrell between 14% and 14.5%. When we started 10 years ago, my winemaker and friend Rafa Orozco was very concerned that we couldn't get them dry without cultured yeasts, but when I did convince him to stop using any of them we discovered quite the contrary: the native yeasts produced a roaring fermentation which we always have a hard time toning down to keep it gentle and slow, which we do by cooling the small (four ton) open fermenting vats as well as we can. Our wines are always around the 2 gr level in residual sugar and I haven't heard anyone describe them as 'sweet'. So, yes, you don't need the selected yeasts to finish your wines if your grapes are right.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
It seems like the process of natural selection would bias yeast populations over time towards those with the highest alcohol tolerance - these would be the 'last standing' (in Joe's happy phrase) and therefore, you'd think, the most prolific propagators in the local environment. But I own to not knowing the details of yeast reproduction (apart from cell division in the medium).