the fish safe silicone has no antibacterial additives as the other 'bathtub caulk has for a good reason. I don't know if it is officially good safe, but it wouldn't bother me a bit.
Well, it's gone all the way from 1.102 to 1.005. How do you appreciate the amount of carbonation here? Because if I get it right, carbonation is sort of fermentation isn't it? Albeit a very slow one?Unless you've started off with a batch you're sure will go to completion and still have some yeast capacity left, making a sparkling batch isn't something to do on a whim or you have a serious risk of bottle bombs. I haven't done the math but if your mead would finish out at .995 (I've had mine go as low as .990) from 1.005, that's WAY too much carbonation, not safe...
The reason I thought champagne was still fermenting was because I thought the sparkling was CO2 bubbles produced by the yeast as they eat the sugar. I just found out that's not quite the case - the "bubbles" are produced by the fact that the air in the bottle is carbon dioxide and are the result of the reaction between the carbon dioxide and the liquid, if I understand things correctly.If its active, and you unscrew the top regularly, you could put it in any bottle.
As for champagne. It's fermented dry. It doesn't keep fermenting, because there's no sugar left to ferment.
It's calculating the residual sugar that's hard, so we just wait til it's finished, degass then add a measured amount.
The yeast eat this measured amount, make it sparkle, run out of food and go to sleep.
Corking an active ferment is dangerous, because you don't know how much sugar remains.
You don't know how much CO2 is already in the wine.
There are a couple other dangerous unknowns, but these are the biggest.
Also, the sweet mead still hasn't increased its pH after the potassium carbonate I poured in weeks ago! The speed has also slowed down to -1 SG/day. Is it possible the sweet batch has reached it's maximum pH-level, no matter how much potassium carbonate I pour in there? Maybe it can't accumulate any more?
I see, well I'm not sure if I dare to add any more to be honest. Not for a while anyway. The speed is fairly constant right now so it'll do.I had the same problem when trying to adjust my aquarium's pH when I was a kid, something in there was buffering it and it kept returning to the same pH within a couple of days no matter how much of what I added. But looking at the theory on how chemical reactions work when you're neutralizing an acid, there shouldn't be a limit like that until you've reached the solubility limit for potassium carbonate which should be pretty high, but there can be buffering effects that keep knocking it back to where it was. Don't forget, the yeast continue to produce acid, so they may be responsible for the returns to your low pH.
Ah, I just used EC-1118 as an example though since it's one that came to mind. But there's one weird thing here, and it's that my sweet mead, using the same yeast with a supposed tolerance of 11%, ended up at just 9.3%. It went from it's OG of 1.115 to just 1.042. 1.042 is pretty far from 1.000, and judging by the density and its taste, there's a lot of sugar left in there. What may have caused th yeast to die off like that so early? If any of the batches should have gone above the tolerance level, it should've been the sweet mead since the only difference between the batches is that the sweet mead had one more kg of honey. I also added a lot of potassium carbonate before it started to slow down. It's all like a huge paradox - the sweeter mead stops earlier than the one with less honey; potassium carbonate didn't increase the pH but (maybe not the cause but there seems to be a connection) for some reason the batch started slowing down when I added the potassium carbonate.Yeast tolerance to alcohol depends on how well it's treated. I've had them stall out a little early, and also over-achieve.
If you're fermenting dry, then it only matters that the tolerance is not reached, so 11% using EC-1118 is wholly achievable if you ferment the batch dry.
The tolerance is also used to aid the 'artform' of residual sweetness. It's a bit hit and miss though.
I wouldn't use EC-1118 though. There are kinder yeasts that give better flavours. I tend to use K1V-1116 or D47
As they're readily available.
EC1118 is very aggressive, and can blow off delicate aromas. If you use it, slow it down by keeping it extra cool. It can make nasty stuff if you run it bear the top of its temp tolerance, or alcohol tolerance.
Oh, I meant that you can know the maximum possible tolerance by calculating the difference between OG and assuming it'll end up with an FG of 1.000 or 0.995 in the driest scenario.See, that's the thing, the listed tolerance is not a maximum, either... as you've seen from some cases on here as well as yours, the yeast occasionally blows right past its tolerance if the conditions are somehow just right for it.
Now, if I recall, you'd used the wyeast sweet mead yeast which I think is the yeast that has given even very experienced meadmakers problems. Add a fussy-pants yeast to the pH problems you had with that batch, and it's not too surprising it crapped out early. If it's really too sweet, you can always make another drier batch and combine them. Just make sure to stabilize it or depending on the other yeast you use, it may then eat all the leftovers that the sweet mead yeast couldn't handle!
Another factor you might not have thought about, the more honey you start with, the harder a start it is for the yeast, and the harder the start, the higher the risk of an early stall. Not that 1.115 is really high, but it might have been too much for a yeast that's only rated to 11%.