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Clarifying elderflower wine
I made some elderflower wine last year and have now decanted it into
bottles. It is very cloudy. What would you recommend to make it clear,
please?
Huw M. Edwards
via email

Hmmmm. As long as it is not fermenting and is stable other than
being cloudy, it sounds like you need either an enzyme, a fining agent
or some combination of the two.
Since you’ve got your wine all conveniently bottled up, my advice is
to take three or four bottles and use them as “bench trial” experiments
so you can get an idea of what would be the best for this particular
wine. Even professionals do this so we can try something out on a teeny
bit of the wine before subjecting the whole batch (and our wallet) to a
treatment.
It sounds like you might especially have some challenges because of
the non-grape nature of your wine. Grapes are the winemaking fruit of
choice because they have the most favorable natural balance of sugar,
acids, tannins, proteins, flavor and aroma compounds of any fruit in
existence. Their innate chemistry naturally produces with the greatest
reliability a tasty, sound and stable product without too many (knock
on wood) headaches or hassles for winemakers. Start branching out into
things like banana wine or rose petal mead and you start venturing off
into what I call “interventionist territory” where as a winemaker
you’re going to have to add things, subtract things and, in general,
tweak things in order to end up with a bottle of something tasty,
ageable and stable enough to be called wine.
The first thing I would suggest you try is an enzyme. Enzymes are
actually proteins, usually harvested from fungi or mold like
Aspergillus niger and packaged in a concentrated form for use in
winemaking, brewing and other fun food processes. My favorite workhorse
enzyme is one called “KS” (which stands for “kitchen sink”) from Scott
Labs. KS has an amazing ability to be able to chew through stubborn
hazes, slimy clouds and unsettle-able turbidity and I’ve used it to
settle out cloudiness in fruit wines too, with great success. Try
dosing it in at the rate of 0.2–0.3 mL/gallon (I don’t know how big
your bottles are, so you’ll have to approximate) and let the bottle sit
12–24 hours. If you see good settling of your haze, you know that’s the
answer.
Sometimes just using a fining agent that hooks onto proteins, like
bentonite, will work. Read the directions on whatever brand you buy,
but I tend to add around 1–2 g/gallon. If your haziness is not caused
by a protein then you’ll have to explore other options like colloidal
silica (like brand-name Siligel) or polysaccharide/
diatomaceous earth mix (like Sparkalloid). These kinds of products,
when used in the right doses (the manufacturer should have this
information) can work wonders.
And sometimes it takes a one-two punch. You might try the bentonite
first to see if that does it (it’s pretty gentle) and then progress on
to the more activated agents like the enzymes and the specialized
fining agents. Sometimes even we professional winemakers have to just
throw something at the wall to see what sticks. Remember to always read
product instructions and be sure you understand any interactions
between any products you use. There are many enzymatic products that
become ineffective or yield unexpected results when interacting with
fining agents, such as bentonite.
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