Most winemakers don’t leave the matter of residual sugar up to brix. That factor should be controlled at harvest and even if it gets out of hand, there are other options to keep your wine dry and at a reasonable alcohol percentage or to prevent stuck fermentation. Most of the time, the decision to arrest fermentation, involving a heavy hand of filtration and sulfites, or to add sugar after fermentation is a calculated one designed to smooth over undesirable notes or those considered not mass consumer friendly. Point being, the correlation between alcohol content and sugar content just isn’t there.
Most winemakers don’t leave the matter of residual sugar up to brix. That factor should be controlled at harvest and even if it gets out of hand, there are other options to keep your wine dry and at a reasonable alcohol percentage or to prevent stuck fermentation. Most of the time, the decision to arrest fermentation, involving a heavy hand of filtration and sulfites, or to add sugar after fermentation is a calculated one designed to smooth over undesirable notes or those considered not mass consumer friendly. Point being, the correlation between alcohol content and sugar content just isn’t there.
Thanks for all of the thoughts.
@@DrinkinItIn just some perspective from the production side of things.
@@amandafox5382 It's a perspective that I dont have so I do appreciate it.