
Our plum wine finally finished fermenting over the weekend. After two weeks of gently bubbling away in the outhouse it breathed its last and fell silent. It was quite erie.
That meant it was time for the last stage – putting an absolute stop to any further activity in the liquid and then bottling it up. Obviously you want to make sure that there is no possibility that any further fermentation can take place once the cork is in, or things could get explosive, as we found out to our cost when we made elderflower champagne.
So this time around we added some campden tablets. These kill off any further bacteria in the wine and stop it picking up any contamination from the syphon during the bottling process. It’s toxic stuff when used in concentrated proportions, but in wine making you dilute it thoroughly, adding just one tablet for every gallon of wine. We had 10 litres, which is 2.6 gallons, so we crushed and dropped in two and a half tablets.
When all syphoned off, those 10 litres made a dozen good bottles of very pretty pink wine that we now have to leave for six to nine months before we start to drink. That’ll take us up to next summer. It feels an awful long way off.
Related posts:

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
Hi Nik,
I notice from the photo on this that you have opted for the reusable corks. I am just about to embark on some wine making and am debating the whole reusable vs. natural cork thing. How are you finding their use? Would you recommend them?
Thanks.
{ 4 trackbacks }