THE HYDROMETER Drawing Off The Wine

THE HYDROMETER Drawing Off the Wine

Basic facts:

Wine is comprised of residue, alcohol, water and residual sugar.

Alcohol is formed from the fermentation of sugar.

The first drawing off is done when the fermentation has subsided or ceased. One cannot be sure if this is from the lack of bubbling in the fermentation lock, as closures and the lock often leak. One takes a reading with the hydrometer to check that the wine is not too sweet. If the wine is not ready, it should be allowed to ferment out. If the wine ferments out too dry it can be chaptilised, (see chaptilisation link). A wine that is too dry has a poor balance, poor body and a shorter shelf life.

Hydrometer readings (with Oechslescale) where the tastes best:

Red wine: dry

light dry

full bodied

-10 -1

0

+1

+4

Rosé wine: light dry

light sweet

-2

-0

-0

+3

White wine: very dry

light dry

light sweet

-4 -2

-2

+1

+2

+5

Cherry: fresh, not sweet

sweet, full bodied

+20

+30

+35

+40

Port/Madeira: light sweet

full bodied

+20

+30

+30

+40

Sherry: dry

medium dry

sweet

+8 +15

+15

+20

+25

+30

Kir: light dry

sweet, full bodied

+10 +20

+20

+25

White Vermouth: dry

medium dry

+5 +15

+15

+25

Red Vermouth: dry

sweet

+15 +20

+20

+30

Capri bitters: medium sweet
+35 +40

Blacck currant: according to taste
+30 +40

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