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Dear Wine Wizard,
I really want to filter my Chardonnay like the big wineries do. Are
there small-scale filters for people who only make a barrel of wine?
Nathan Maas
Portland, Oregon
Wine Wizard replies: Absolutely. There are an
increasing number of filters out there for the small-scale producer.
From rough filters that’ll just knock out large, visible particles all
the way down to membrane filters that will exclude tiny things like
yeast and bacteria cells, home winemakers can now filter like the big
guys. Check online and with your winemaking purveyor of choice, but
when I was last in my local boutique winemaking supply store I saw a
couple of company’s filters that I know are nationally available.
Most filters on the market are sold as a filter body (the better units
are made out of metal and weigh at least a few pounds) that holds the
refillable pads or cartridges, which actually do the physical work of
filtering out the solids. That way you only spend the big bucks (on the
filter body) once and can re-order the cheaper filter media only as you
need them. I should mention here that filtration isn’t always necessary
in winemaking, even on a commercial scale. If you’ve got a dry red wine
that has gone through malolactic fermentation, it’s unlikely that
you’ll run the risk of a re-fermentation in the bottle because you’ve
taken most of the food away for yeast and the lactic acid bacteria —
the two most common mic-robes to be living in a corked-up bottle of
wine. Unless you are bottling a sweet wine or one that is not
malo-lactic complete (all the malic acid has not been turned into
lactic acid), you certainly don’t have to go through all the trouble of
sterile (or even rough) filtering.
On that note, one thing that did disturb me a little bit as I was
browsing the shelves for filters — I saw one brand of membrane filter
labeled with an 0.50 micron pore size rating (the size of particle
it’ll let through) and also labeled “Sterile Filter.” Keep in mind that
a filter’s pore size must be 0.45 micron or smaller in order for it to
exclude yeast and bacteria. (And some very recent enological studies
have even suggested that 0.20 micron is the new “sterile” gold
standard!) Anything larger and those “bugs” will be able to get through
into your filtered wine, where they can cause re-fermentations and all
sorts of unsavory mayhem. Read labels carefully and realize that some
filter manufacturers may erroneously package their products.
Also keep in mind that the word “sterile” is used advisedly. Unless
you’re a hospital or lab with an autoclave, you’re never going to be
able to get your winemaking instruments and environment sterile. (By
definition, “sterile” means no microbes are present at all.) Even the
biggest wineries in the world must contend with a certain microbial
risk and rely on stringent sanitation, equipment monitoring and
post-bottling quality control (QC) follow up to monitor their product
and to keep microbial populations at acceptable levels. As a
small-scale winemaker you should feel good doing what they do —
filtering when necessary coupled with good, clean winemaking.
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