BernardSmith
Senior Member
I pitched slurry (stored in the fridge) from a variety of hard ciders I had been making throughout the winter on April 10 and the 3 gallons of SP is still actively fermenting this morning (May 6). The gravity has dropped to about .998 but a) the airlock is still bubbling away very vigorously*** and I can see particles and bubbles very clearly rising and b) I tasted the SP and it tastes pleasantly sweet - not dry but nicely sweet as if the SP should be reading around 1.004 or 5. In other words as if there are unfermentable sugars in this wine.
Apart from the slurry - which was about 1.5 pints - and which almost certainly did contain some apple particulates - the only other fruit was the lemon juice and the table sugar which I added to bring the starting gravity up to 1.085 or a tad higher.
Where is the sweetness coming from? And how come this fermentation seems to be as active as it does at this late stage?
Thoughts?
*** It is as if the colony of yeast is just as large and just as active towards the end of the fermentation as I would expect them to be if there was still about half the sugar remaining to ferment.
Apart from the slurry - which was about 1.5 pints - and which almost certainly did contain some apple particulates - the only other fruit was the lemon juice and the table sugar which I added to bring the starting gravity up to 1.085 or a tad higher.
Where is the sweetness coming from? And how come this fermentation seems to be as active as it does at this late stage?
Thoughts?
*** It is as if the colony of yeast is just as large and just as active towards the end of the fermentation as I would expect them to be if there was still about half the sugar remaining to ferment.
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