Monthly Archives: February 2009

Difficult Acidity Problems

Because titratable acidity (TA) and pH both measure acidity, they tend to move together. Higher TA usually means lower pH and vice versa. Sometimes that relationship breaks down, and that can drive winemakers and meadmakers crazy.

How are pH and titratable acidity different?

TA and pH are two different ways of measuring how acidic your wine is. Because they each measure acidity in a different way, they tell you about different effects that acid will have on your wine. Without getting into the chemistry, TA tells you how acidity will affect the taste. Does a wine taste tart? That’s high TA your tasting. Too flabby? That would be low TA.

What about pH? It most directly measures how the acidity will affect your wine’s microbial stability. As pH rises above 3.5, microcritters have an easier time taking up residence in your wine. Below 3.5, and the wine becomes much more stable. Cultured wine yeasts have an advantage over many other molds, bacteria, and fungi in that they can thrive as long as the pH remains above 3.0, so keeping fermenting wine at a pH between 3.0 and 3.5 goes a long way towards preventing spoilage.

If pH is too high, you can push it down by adding acid. To low, and you can neutralize acid. TA corrections are similarly straightforward, but what do you do when TA and pH need adjustment in opposite directions? A high pH and high TA can mean a tart wine that is vulnerable to spoilage. Try to fix one problem and you’ll make the other one worse. Low pH and low TA is easier to deal with, but both cases need special handling.

Using sugar to balance a high TA wine

I had a high TA – high pH problem with my cherry wine, and I just recently noticed it in my Merlot. The way I handled it was to leave the acidity alone and address the harsh taste by balancing the wine with sugar. It’s not a perfect solution, but it let me address the tart taste without making the pH even worse. I’ve done some more research since then and have another idea that might work: treat with phosphoric acid to push down the pH.

Using phosphoric acid to lower pH

Adding most any acid will usually push the pH down, but phosphoric acid gives you much more bang for the buck than the acids we normally use (citric, malic, and tartaric). This gives us the ability to lower a wine’s pH with only a negligible impact on it’s TA. Now we can tackle a high TA – high pH wine by first neutralizing enough acid to get the TA where we want it, then adding phosphoric acid to push the pH down. You will have to conduct trials on precisely measured amounts of wine to know how much a given amount of phosphoric acid will move the pH.

You’ll also have to be careful! While this stuff is non toxic, it can be very dangerous to handle. If you’re not qualified to handle corrosive chemicals, then you shouldn’t use this option.

Low TA – low pH in mead

If you run into high TA – high pH, it’s probably in a wine. You’ll see the flip side of that coin in mead. You can tackle that by adding cream of tartar before pitching the yeast and delaying any acid additions until after it has fermented out.

So if the mead is too flabby for your taste, you can improve it by adding acid. To avoid pushing down the pH so much that your yeast can’t ferment, adjust the TA after the mead has fermented to dryness. A low pH won’t matter nearly as much, then, and can keep your mead stable for extended aging.

You can also a teaspoon of potassium bitartrate (cream of tartar) to each gallon of must. This will improve the buffering capacity of the fermenting mead and keep the pH from dropping so much. It’s still a good idea to delay any acid additions until after the yeast have done their work.

Know Your Ingredients: Sugar

Winemakers use sugar all the time, and I thought it would be a good idea to gather up what I know about sugar in one place, as I did for cranberries, honey, and chocolate.

Weight and volume of table sugar

For other ingredients, I’m usually very interested in composition. How much sugar in 100 g of blueberries or how much, and what kind, of acid in 100 g of bananas. Table sugar is a component, so weight and volume conversions are a lot more useful than knowing that its a disaccharide of glucose and fructose. So here’s how to convert pounds of table sugar to cups (or kilograms to liters) and back again:

Quantity of Sugar Equivilent
1 lb 2.25 cups
1 cup 0.44 lb
1 kg 1.183 liters
1 liter 0.85 kg

How to make a sugar syryp

It’s best to add sugar to wine or must by making a sugar syrup. In fact, it’s best to dissolve any solid additives in a little water before adding them to wine. It isn’t just that it’s a lot easier to fully incorporate the additive this way; it also keeps dissolved CO2 from quickly coming out of solution. Sanitizing is as easy as boiling & cooling (for small amounts use a pyrex measuring cup in a microwave oven).

You normally want to add only as much water as necessary, but how much is that? At room temperature, you can theoretically dissolve about 212 g/100 ml. That works out to a 1.122 lb/cup or about 2.5 cups sugar to 1 cup water (2.12 kg/liter which gives us the same ratio 2.5 liters of sugar to 1 liter water). That’s close to, but a bit more than, the standard recipe for a sugar syrup:

2 parts, by volume, of sugar to 1 part water will yield 2 parts of a 63º Brix solution (1.310 specific gravity)

Comparing sugar syrup to honey

You would combine sugar syrup and wine (or mead or must) the same way you would honey. In particular, you would use the same calculations to decide how much syrup or honey to add. You just need to know the specific gravity of each:

Syrup Specific Gravity
Honey @ 15% water 1.4350
Honey @ 18% water 1.4171
Sugar syrup 1.310

This is a post I should have written a long time ago. I don’t know about you, but I’ve looked up these details countless times – now we won’t have to.

Update 7/12/2010 – My own measurements

I measured the volume of sugar syrup made this way and it is very close to 2 parts.  I also wanted to measure the specific gravity. My hydrometer doesn’t go up that high, so I had to mix equal parts syrup and water. That weighed in at 1.160, which implies an SG for the syrup of 1.320 – very close to the predicted value.