Why Rack Your Wine During The Aging Process?

March 30, 2008 by Scott "The Wine Making Guy"  
Filed under Tips

My goals this weekend were two-fold:

1) Celebrate “Earth Hour” on Saturday – which my wife and I did indeed do (hope you did too)

2) Get caught up on all of those wine making activities that I haven’t had time for over the last several weeks (and I know I’m not the only one in this boat …)

This mainly included:

- Cleaning out our pantry in the basement under the stairs so that we had a nice, dark and cool space to age our wine (we like to “bulk age” our wine in the carboy so that the batch has a consistent flavour)

- Racking our current batches of wine that are in the aging process so that I could get them into our new found “aging room”

I am pleased to say that for the most part I was successful in achieving my goals this weekend, but the experience was even more satisfying then expected as it reminded me of several important things about wine making that I wanted to share with you all.

Why Do We Rack Our Wine During The Aging Process?

Well, the most obvious reason is to get rid of the sediment at the bottom of the carboy as it helps clear the wine ensuring that there is less sediment in the bottle. Now of course if you are a proponent of filtering your wine this is less of an issue for you, but I’m of the mind that if you age and rack your wine properly you really don’t need to filter your wine. This is a personal opinion of course …. :)

The other (and often forgotten reason) is that racking your wine allows for a little bit of oxygen to be added to your wine, which in fact allows your wine to “breath” – much like when you decant your wine before enjoying it. This should help your wine develop it’s bouquet and flavours as it ages.

Do I Need To Add Anything To Wine If I Plan On Aging It For More Then Six Months?

The simple answer is yes. If you would like to age your wine past 6 months you need to add a preservative to stave off oxidization, which will potentially ruin your wine. To do this simply add 1/4 teaspoon of potassium metabisulphate to 1/2 cup of cool water then gently stir this solution into your carboy (this assumes you have 23 litres of wine).

I’ve Racked My Wine And Have An Airspace Left In The Carboy – Now What?

One of the reasons why we use carboys as the secondary and for aging is that it has narrow neck. This is to help reduce the airspace in the container to limit potential contact with oxygen thereby reducing the chance that your wine will spoil.

You’ll notice, however, that when you rack (transfer your wine from one container to the next leaving the sediment behind) that you’ll have less wine in the new carboy then what you originally had. This is simply because the sediment at the bottom of the carboy takes up some of the volume in the carboy, not to mention the fact that you’ll be leaving some of the wine behind from the bottom instead of risking having some of the sediment transfer over to the new carboy in the wine at the bottom.

You will want to top up your wine in the new carboy to within 5 cm of the bottom of the bung, so the question therefore becomes what do you use?

Here’s what I usually use (and I would be curious to hear what you use):

1) Sterile water – in my opinion though this waters down the wine depending on how much you have to add so I have been moving away from using it.

2) Similar wine to the one your making (either commercial or homemade) – it adds a unique, balanced flavour to the wine. This is what I did today with one of our wines we’re making from an expensive wine kit. It is the Stag’s Leap Merlot so I decided to added two bottles of Casa Lapostelle (a medium priced 2006 Chilean Merlot we quite like) with the hope that it will add a complex flavour to the wine. This was a little more expensive then we expected though as the wine we added cost $16 a bottle. So we’re now in for just under $200 for this wine kit so I hope it will turn out well – we justified the extra expense though as we’re still just over $6 a bottle for wine we expect will rival a $30 – $50 bottle of wine.

I’ve also heard of people making a cheaper matching wine kit to the one they’re making to specifically use as a “topper upper”. Interesting idea!

For our chocolate raspberry port I have purchased a cheap blended port to top things up once I rack it.

3) White or red grape concentrate (usually done with fruit wines) – This are usually included in the fruit wine recipes anyways to add a bit of fruitiness and depth so generally not a bad idea although I’ve heard some fruit wine advocates ask why you’d want a fruit wine to taste like a grape wine? Personal preference I guess.

4) Something else – This is where you can experiment a bit. For our crabapple wine, for example, I added two 500 ml cans of Strongbow dry cider and was also considering adding some unsweetened apple juice.

Which ones are right and which ones are wrong? I guess it really comes down to personal taste and you really won’t know how things turn out till you bottle your wine and try it for the first time.

Sometimes you wine and sometimes you lose but at least you can be comforted knowing that chances are you’ll still be able to use your wine in some fashion regardless. This could be as part of your cooking, as a wine spritzer in the summer (i.e. add Sprite or 7-Up to it) or you can even gussy it up with some drink crystals.

Remember to record what you’ve added and how much so that you can replicate your wine again if it turns out really well!

Anyhoo, just some ideas to throw your way this evening.

I’d be curious to know what your thoughts are on racking (i.e. how often during aging), wine filtering and what you use to up your wine during the aging process.

I look forward to hearing from you soon.

- Scott

Comments

7 Responses to “Why Rack Your Wine During The Aging Process?”
  1. Rick Lomas says:

    I used to make my own wine, but at the moment I live in Provence, France where wine is plentiful, gorgeous and cheap…cheers

  2. Gregory says:

    Scott

    thanks for the info, it is interesting and I have not started just because I am between homes and not settle, but will buy may will start on my first batch of freash mango wine that I will have locally. I have started a Papaya liquer that was in the first lesson, will work on it then we will enjoy. Again Thanks.
    Greg

  3. Gregory says:

    Scott

    thanks for the info, it is interesting and I have not started just because I am between homes and not settle, but will by May will start on my first batch of freash mango wine that I will have locally. I have started a Papaya liquer that was in the first lesson, will work on it then we will enjoy. Again Thanks.
    Greg

  4. Richard Beaudin says:

    Scott,

    I have seen several views regarding how often to rack. In a recent issue of WineMaker the suggestion is that the wine should not be racked more than 3 times in a 12 month period. Agree.. reason is to get it off the sediment..for two reasons: 1. to help in clarification (and no I do not filter.. the wine seems very clear without filtering and I prefer to keep as much taste and color as I can, and 2. to remove off tastes that may occur if the wine is left on the lees and dead yeast too long.

    I have three batches currently that I am working. The first has had probably too much racking, the second likely just enough, and the third is just completing fining now. So I will let you know once these have a chance to age.

    In terms of sulfite.. agree I have heard as well about 1/4 teaspoon per 23 litres.. for aging and likely just before bottling. Having said that, you can purchase a Titrate kit to test the PPM. I believe a healthy wine should be between 30 – 35/PPM.

    In terms of the carboy, I had the same problem .. if you make a 23 litre kit, even with minimum racking, you will need to top off. The way I am currently doing it is that I use a 23 litre carboy for secondary fermentation through fining. Then I rack into an 18 litre carboy… and put the extra into magnums, 750, or 375 depending upon what is left over. I then use the extra to top off during subsequent racking. Also, since I have some bottled (actually not corked by with airlock/#2 stopper), I can then do some tasting over time to see when I think the optimum time might be for bottling.

    All of that said, still a beginner. I expect to “taste” the fruits of my labor starting in September. Hoping this will be a celebration of success, and not a pouring down the sink! :-)

    Richard

  5. Kevin says:

    Scott,
    I am very much a novice at home made wine making. I have spent a great deal of coin on geting my self set uop to have at least three batches in differant stages of fermentation going on at the same time. Currently have 4 in progress, the first being a Vintners Reserve Chardonnay. That batch was cleared and sent to a carboy in the closet a couple weeks ago. I was not at all impressed with the “unaged” taste and nose of this and hope that a 3 month bulk age B4 bottling will help things out quite a bit. It not, I’ll sulfite it and send it back in the dark for future review. While it has not had any settling as of yet, I do intend to rack it only once B4 transfering to bottles. I worry about oxygen and spoiling what I have so far invested.
    On another note, I also just began the fineing and clearing of an “Island Mist Tropical Fruit Reisling” Now let me add that this will not be you normal low alcohol batch. I gave this a nice healthy sugar syrup boost and my current calcs are telling me I’ll end up with a 13.5% Reisling. I’m hopeing it will offset the sweetness of those fruit wins and turn out a decent white for a low cost kit. I’ll let you know what happens. Primary tastes seem to indecate it to still be a bit sweet but I fermented it out to .990 SHould be an interesting venture for a novice.
    Thanks for your wonderfully informative website.
    Kevin In Colorado

  6. Robert says:

    What I have been doing is not adding any wine or water to the wine. I have been sterilizing glass marbles and pouring them into the carboy to raise it to the desired level.

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