I'm at the stage now where I have been degassing my Riesling before adding the clarifiers. The instructions call for stirring the wine 6-8 times a day for 2 days to remove all the CO2. It is now day 3, and when I degassed this morning, there are still a massive amount of bubbles being created. The bottle is at about 76-78deg (using a brew-belt), and I am degassing with the whip style wand on my drill.
I have googled around a bit, and noticed mention that there are two types of bubbles which will be created when degassing. Tiny little bubbles, which are SO2, and larger bubbles which are CO2. Over the 3 days of degassing, I have only been getting very tiny bubbles (foam like frothiness). Does this mean all the CO2 is out, and all that remains is SO2? Do I want to beat out all the SO2 as well? I'm thinking maybe I'll pop over to Canadian Tire and pick up a wine bottle saver and try vacuum degassing before adding the clarifiers next.
I have googled around a bit, and noticed mention that there are two types of bubbles which will be created when degassing. Tiny little bubbles, which are SO2, and larger bubbles which are CO2. Over the 3 days of degassing, I have only been getting very tiny bubbles (foam like frothiness). Does this mean all the CO2 is out, and all that remains is SO2? Do I want to beat out all the SO2 as well? I'm thinking maybe I'll pop over to Canadian Tire and pick up a wine bottle saver and try vacuum degassing before adding the clarifiers next.