When Ray Charles and Betty Carter sang the definitive version of
Frank Loesser’s song “Baby, It’s Cold Outside,” it’s a pretty sure bet
that home winemaking was the last thing on their minds. It’s a pity,
because temperature control for kit winemaking is deucedly important,
but it’s one of those things that never gets the attention it deserves,
like international monetary policy, or when those jet packs and
vacations on the moon I was promised back in grade school are going to
get here. The bottom line is that most people make their kit wines too
cold — far too cold — which leads to a large number of immediate
concerns and downstream processing problems for the kit.
So why do they do it? There’s lots of blame to go around: partly it’s a
misunderstanding of how wine kits perform best (that’s my fault for not
explaining it better), partly it’s marketing pieces that trumpet the
benefits of “cold-fermented in stainless steel,” or other such
advertising-speak, and finally it’s because some people won’t read or
obey instructions (hah, bet you wondered when I’d get around to blaming
the customer!)
While it’s true that some white wines benefit from cool fermentation,
that’s a very small percentage of wines that are made. The idea behind
keeping it cool is that the very most delicate and volatile aromas
(from very low-weight molecular compounds) which contribute that top 1%
of the aromatic nose of a wine can be blown off of a fermentation that
is too vigorous or too warm. But this only applies to grapes that have
been picked cold, transported cold, crushed cold, and kept cold at
every single step of the way. Let it warm up for even a short time and
those low-weight molecular compounds are simply gone.
Consider a wine kit for a moment. The fruit is picked cold, of course:
hot grapes oxidize quickly and the juice spoils. Pressed cold, sure —
nobody heats a press or puts it anywhere but in the shade. Also pumped,
transported and blended cold, as this keeps down spoilage at every step
of the way. But at some point the juice is going to go through a
pasteurizer and hit 160 °F (75 °C) before being cooled back down for
packaging. You can see where this breaks down the whole cold-alla-time
ideal.
Greasy yeasty
With that negation of the low-weight molecular compounds, not only are
there no benefits to cool fermentation, there are a lot of potential
problems. Kits that are too cold at yeast pitching time, have a very
slow onset of fermentation. This is because the dried yeast pitched
into the must has to soak up some liquid and soften up before it can go
to work. This allows the yeast’s integument (outer skin) freer passage
of nutrients and sugar in, while waste products, like alcohol and
carbon dioxide, out.
Think of the integument like a complex balloon of layered fatty-acid
esters. It more-or-less resembles a bubble of grease with the living
machinery of the cell inside. It sounds weird, making a living organism
out of grease, but if you ate Mennonite food like I did for the first
half of my life, you’d see how it’s possible. It all makes sense on a
microscopic level, where the surface tension on a teeny-tiny grease
droplet is so intense it’s actually as strong as steel.
But it’s still grease. Soak your bacon platter in cold water and I
don’t care how much dishwashing liquid you use: your dishes will still
be coated in a solid greasy layer. But switch to warm water, and the
grease will soften and slough off. Same deal with yeast cells. Warmer
must = softer outer integument, and a more rapid exchange of nutrients
and waste products and a quick start to breeding.
There are some folks who like to re-hydrate their yeast before use.
Theoretically this has benefits — only, however, if you do it exactly
according to the instructions, and use water at 100 °F (~40 °C). This
really softens up the yeast. The drawback is that you have to acclimate
the yeast to the must temperature. If you pitch 100 °F (~40 °C) yeast
slurry into 65 °F (18 °C) must the temperature sheer will kill most of
the yeast immediately. And then the yeast metabolism will slow right
down, due to the chilly conditions. Dry pitching is fast, safe and easy.
Getting a quick start and breeding as rapidly as possible has many
benefits, not least of which is the greedy-jerk factor: by rapidly
breeding the yeast tie up all the nutrients and resources necessary to
complete cell-wall synthesis and new cell production. This form of
competitive exclusion ensures that other organisms, which could invade
the wine and ruin it, are left without a food source. Warm, happy yeast
are kind of like those really big guys ahead of you in the buffet line.
You can pretty much kiss that plate of shrimp goodbye!
Another effect of increased speed of onset of fermentation is that the
sooner the yeast start producing ethanol, the sooner the wine is
protected by the sanitizing power of that alcohol, and a fast onset can
ensure a thorough fermentation that doesn’t leave any sugars or
nutrients for other organisms to spoil the wine
post-fermentation.
Giving you gas
Low temperature fermentations run a risk of slowing or stopping
altogether. Yeast is a living organism — when cold, it metabolizes much
more slowly. This is why we store food in a refrigerator: at cold
temperatures the organisms that can consume the nutrients in food are
slowed down so that they cannot spoil it before we use it. Keep yeast
too cool for too long and they can go dormant or even die, leaving a
wine with residual sugar and a stuck fermentation.
Plus, colder fermentation temperatures contribute to the retention of
carbon dioxide gas in solution. As the yeast metabolize the sugar, they
don’t just produce alcohol, they also make a lot of carbon dioxide. But
they let it go in extremely small amounts at a time, and certainly not
in a bubble big enough to see. In fact, that bubble in your airlock is
the combined effort of tens of millions of yeast cells, and it’s not
until the wine is totally saturated with microscopic bubbles of CO2 that it begins to fizz out of solution.
And one quirk of CO2
saturation is that the colder a liquid solution is, the more gas it
will hold. Think of two cans of soda, one buried in ice, the other in
the back window of your car on a sunny day. Open both and the cold one
barely hisses, but is powerfully fizzy when you take a slug. The hot
soda foams madly when you open it, but it’s very nearly flat when you
taste it — that’s the power of gas saturation and temperature!
This has a lot of downstream implications for clearing and flavor
development. Gassy wines are difficult to clear (the finings keep
getting lofted back into suspension by CO2 bubbles) and are often stinky because the CO2 also brings along fellow travellers, like a whiff of H2S (hydrogen sulphide, that rotten-egg smell). All fermentations produce a little H2S, but it’s normally blown off in the course of a warm, vigorous fermentation, and it easily gets trapped with the CO2. Pyew!
And it’s more difficult to stir a cold wine to degas as required by
most kit instructions. You can stir a cold wine all day long and still
harvest more gas bubbles, and you’ll still wind up with a little fizz
when you go to bottle. Warm it up to an appropriate temperature and the
living (and stirring and degassing) will be easy.
A number of astute readers (and by definition, if you’re reading this
column you are very astute. Probably good looking to boot.) are going
to ask, “If cold fermentations are so heinous, how do commercial
wineries get away with it?” They get away with it because unlike you
they’re making tens of thousands of gallons of wine at a time — so
they’re not looking at an empty wine rack tapping their feet with
thirst, and can wait until the wine finishes on its own time. And a lot
of time is what it can take with some cold fermentations, taking months
simply to finish before any additional processing (stabilizing and
fining) can be attempted. Few kit winemakers have that luxury (or that
large of an existing inventory to coast for four or five months,
waiting for the fermentation to finish)!
Also, as I mentioned earlier, there aren’t that many extremely cold
fermentations. Many red wines are allowed to rise up to 90 °F (32 °C)
in order to extract more color and tannin from the skins and warm
fermentations are necessary to a variety of styles of both red and
white wines.
Measuring up
Now that we’re agreed that warmer is better, the first step for making
sure you’ve got the right temperature is to get a thermometer. Most
winemaking equipment kits include a food-grade floating thermometer in
the standard box. These work fine, but are a little bit pokey, and
being made of glass they are a bit fragile for some people. There are a
variety of instant-read thermometers available for kitchen use that can
be adapted, as long as the probe portion of the thermometer reaches far
enough into the must. I have to confess that a deeply held gadget lust
that guided my purchase of the ultimate winemaking thermometer: my
digital infrared thermometer (pictured to the right). It’s one of those
gadgets so much better, so profoundly improved over regular technology
that it changes everything. It reads almost instantly, is incredibly
accurate, and lets you survey multiple carboys in seconds. You can tell
right away if your must is warm enough for pitching, or if you need to
work on temperature regulating your fermenting area.
The one I use is the Reed ST-882. I got it for less than a hundred
bucks from a lab supply company and it’s good from -58 to 1000 °F (-50
to 538 °C). It’s so incredibly useful that I tote it around and find
things to point it at in my spare time. Got a fever? I can tell from
across the room! Is that sugar syrup ready for peanut brittle? I can
tell from the house next door! It even has an aiming laser that allows
you to precisely focus on your intended target. Of course, that led me
to name my thermometer “Goldfinger” in honor of villainous lasers
everywhere. You may not wish to shell out that kind of dough for a
techno-fetish, but whatever sort of thermometer you wind up with, the
most important thing is that it gets used regularly.
Getting it right
What’s an appropriate temperature? The top of the range mentioned in
your wine kit instruction set. Typically they list a range such as
65–75 °F (18–24 °C), so you want to shoot for 75 °F (24 °C) from
pitching day to bottling day, to ensure you can get your kit finished
in the correct time frame and properly clarified and degassed. The most
crucial part of this will be the temperature of the must before you
pitch the yeast. If it’s not warm enough, you’ll need to get it up to
temperature before the rubber (yeast) hits the road (fermenter).
If you’ve already made the kit up and it’s too cold, the most important
thing is to avoid adding the yeast until you get the temperature up to
the right level. By far the quickest way to do this is to immerse the
fermenter in a washtub or bathtub full of warm water, and monitor the
temperature, stirring gently until it comes into range. It’s important
not to leave the water running while you’re out of sight of the bucket:
not only could it overflow, even worse the bucket could tip over in the
rising water and you’ll have a Cabernet and soap scum blend!
If you can’t lift the primary fermenter into a tub you can put it in
the warmest spot in the house and use a warming strategy: an electric
blanket, a place by the fire or a small space heater gently directed at
it. All of these things will work well, but have some risk: never, ever
put the fermenter on top of an electrically heated pad or blanket. This
can cause dangerous shorts, hot spots and even fires. Also, don’t leave
it unattended by a fireplace or with a heater pointed at it — it could
get too hot and the must could boil or the fermenter could even melt.
It helps to think of your wine as a helpless baby (please, no goo-goo
talking to your wine). You wouldn’t leave any living thing unattended
wrapped in an electric blanket, so don’t do it to your poor yeast! Keep
stirring to distribute the heat and keep checking the temperature on a
regular schedule to make sure it doesn’t overheat.
If you’re making up your kit and want to make sure it’s warm enough,
the simplest strategy is to get part of your water additions from the
hot water tap in your sink. This assumes that you’re using your own tap
water to make up kits, a practice I normally recommend (read more about
water in WineMaker’s
February-March, 2008 “Wine Kits” column). It takes a bit of fiddling,
stirring and temperature monitoring, but it does ensure instant
temperature gratification.
If you’re using bottled or spring water you can heat up a portion of it
to make up the must. Don’t heat it up to boiling — too much chance of
overheating or even potentially cooking a portion of the must when you
add it. Instead, blend a gallon (~L) of boiling water with a gallon
(~L) of cool water and slowly add it to the must, stirring and checking
the temperature as you go. It sounds a bit tedious on paper, but it
goes quickly and easily in your winemaking area.
What to do once you’re there
Maintaining the temperature of the fermentation is easier than you
might think. Even in the small volumes of a 5-gallon/19-L fermentation
vessel the metabolizing yeast create enough of their own heat to buffer
against a slight chill. As long as the fermenter is in a reasonably
warm place, within a couple of degrees of your target temperature, it
should get along just fine.
What about a cool house? With increasing energy costs, very few people
leave their homes at 70 °F (21 °C) during the day while they’re out —
except perhaps those folks living in the scorching South who are
cooling it to that level! But this article is about coming in from the
cold, not retreating from the heat. If you do turn down the thermostat
in the morning, you’ll need a strategy to keep your wine from icing
over.
First, find the warmest room in your home. A handy tool for this is a
min-max thermometer, commonly sold at gardening store and home centers.
As the name suggests, it records the highest and lowest temperature of
the sampling period. Put it in the room, come back in 24 hours, check
it and reset it and you have your answer. With my min-max I found out
that my pantry, next door to the hot water heater, stays at 75 °F (24
°C) year-round, making it a perfect place to dry herbs or ferment wine.
Who needs a pantry anyway?
If you’re lucky enough to have zone-control over your house heat you
can forget the min-max testing, arbitrarily pick a space and adapt it.
If not, then there are very small fan-driven ceramic heating units
available for less than $40. The elements in them never get hot enough
to start a fire; they’re thermostatically controlled and use minimal
amounts of electricity. They can keep a small room comfortably warm for
very little cost. Just make sure to monitor your fermentation regularly
until you’re certain that the temperature is stable and the room is
neither too hot nor too warm.
If it’s only a single carboy and you don’t want to heat the whole room,
or if you don’t mind spending money on even more gadgets, then you may
wish to invest in the available fermentation temperature control
devices. The simplest and least expensive of these is the Brew Belt.
Looking like a blue plastic men’s belt (ah, the sartorial splendor of
the 1970’s never dies) it slides around the carboy and plugs into the
wall socket, maintaining a steady 70–72 °F (21–22 °C). While the
manufacturer does not recommend using it with glass carboys, it works
fine with all sorts of plastic. I’ve got a half-dozen in my winemaking
drawer and wouldn’t leave home without them.
A bit fancier (and useful for glass carboys) is the FermWrap Heater,
which looks like a sheet of MACtac with a power cord. It is safe for
use on glass carboys, but you’ll have to figure out how to judge the
temperature you can maintain with it through trial and error. Or not:
there is a kit to go with it that includes a temperature probe and a
digital controller that lets you dial in the desired temperature and
then puts a computer in charge of maintaining it.
Now if only those FermWrap characters were working on my jet pack and
my moon holiday! In the meantime, the most important thing is not to
worry: a little thermometer work and a little warm water will take care
of most of the temperature adjustments your wine will need, and when
it’s cold outside . . .
Tim Vandergrift is WineMaker’s kit
columnist and wordiest writer. He says that if you put a cold shoulder
to the wheel, it’s a chill wind that blows no good. Sometimes he blogs
coherently at www.timswineblog.com.
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