Sparkling to still?
Some of our wine turned from still to sparkling. Can we change it
back to still at this point? Will nitrogen sparging take care of it or
do we need to add sorbate?
Greg Hyman
Conway, South Carolina
Like
I mentioned earlier, winemakers do have some control over how much
fizziness we bottle our wine with. We can use a sparging stone in-line
with a pump and hose (or in the bottom of a keg, if you have smaller
amounts) to add carbon dioxide or, interestingly, we can sparge with
nitrogen in the exact same way to remove dissolved carbon dioxide.
Sparging for carbon dioxide removal only works, however, as long as
your carbon dioxide is not being constantly replenished by microbial
activity. If you have an active fermentation going on, either from
unfinished sugars from the primary fermentation, from an incomplete
malolactic fermentation or from a microbial infection of any kind, no
amount of sparging with nitrogen will remove the CO2 if it keeps
getting produced. Before you sparge to strip out the CO2, you should
determine if you just have residual dissolved gas or if it’s being
created by an unwelcome source. If it is, you could “sterile” filter
(through a 0.45 micron nominal pad or membrane), which just by moving
your wine through the filter alone, may remove some of your dissolved
CO2.
If you want to use nitrogen to strip out some of the dissolved
carbon dioxide, I find it works best if my starting dissolved CO2 is
under 2000 mg/L. The challenge with nitrogen gas is that it can also
strip out aromas when you bubble it through your wine — it’s like
swirling your glass repeatedly and liberating all of those nice smells
you may actually want to keep in your wine. Sometimes I find that you
can lose a lot of the carbon dioxide just by splash-racking (works well
for young red wines especially, who can often use oxygen anyway at that
stage) and moving the wine around the cellar. This doesn’t strip aromas
nearly as much as a large sparging would. Of course, this doesn’t work
for delicate whites that you may not want oxidized, in which case I
would sterile filter, then proceed to sparge with nitrogen until the
wine is at the level of dissolved carbon dioxide you desire. Don’t be
afraid of using the easiest tool to degas: time. Often, if there is no
microbial activity, a wine will lose all of its dissolved CO2 during
the 12–18 months you may age it before bottling.
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