Secondary fermentation: Difference between revisions
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In winemaking, a second [[ | In winemaking, a second [[alcohol]] [[fermentation]] by [[yeast]] performed in a champagne bottle secured with a special, hollow closure secured with a wire "cage," the purpose of which is to trap the [[carbon dioxide]] produced by the fermentation and force it to be absorbed into the [[wine]]. The result is a [[sparkling wine]]. This secondary fermentation can actually be a continuation of the fermentation by the original yeast [[inoculation]] or can be induced at [[bottling]] time by inoculating a sweetened still wine with a second yeast especially adept at fermenting under pressure. It is NOT correct to refer to a fermentation in a secondary fermentation vessel (e.g. a [[carboy]]) as a secondary fermentation. See [[primary fermentation]] and [[Krausening]]. | ||
[[Category:Fermentation]] | [[Category:Fermentation]] | ||
[[Category:Glossary]] | [[Category:Glossary]] |
Latest revision as of 22:27, 7 October 2017
In winemaking, a second alcohol fermentation by yeast performed in a champagne bottle secured with a special, hollow closure secured with a wire "cage," the purpose of which is to trap the carbon dioxide produced by the fermentation and force it to be absorbed into the wine. The result is a sparkling wine. This secondary fermentation can actually be a continuation of the fermentation by the original yeast inoculation or can be induced at bottling time by inoculating a sweetened still wine with a second yeast especially adept at fermenting under pressure. It is NOT correct to refer to a fermentation in a secondary fermentation vessel (e.g. a carboy) as a secondary fermentation. See primary fermentation and Krausening.