Techniques in Home Winemaking

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Acidification / Deacidification

Use the table below to help you identify suspected likely causes of high/low TA and/or high/low pH, and options or recommended remedial actions. For more information, please consult my book, Modern Home Winemaking.

Before treating an entire batch, be sure to always run bench trials first and double-check all your calculations.

Need help figuring out your acidification or deacidification calculations or running your bench trials? Check out these tools!

Condition Primary Objectives Suspected Likely Causes Options / Recommended Actions

Low TA
(low pH)

Increase TA
(minimize decrease in pH)

Low tartaric/malic acid
Low potassium

  • No adjustments pre-ferment
  • Re-evaluate post-ferment

Low TA
(high pH)

Increase TA
(decrease pH)

Low tartaric/malic acid

  • Acidify with:
    ► Tartaric acid
    ► Tartaric/malic blend if no MLF
    ► Lactic acid for fine-tuning wine
    ► Citric acid if no MLF
  • Blend with high-TA/low-pH juice or wine

High TA
(low pH)

Reduce TA
(increase pH)

High tartaric acid

  • Deacidify with a carbonate salt + cold stabilize
  • Cold stabilize only (pH decreases if less than 3.65)
  • Blend with low-TA/high-pH juice or wine
  • Ameliorate

High TA
(low pH)

Reduce TA
(increase pH)

High malic acid
  • Ferment using malic-degrading yeast
  • Perform MLF (style permitting)
  • Blend with low-TA/high-pH juice or wine
  • Ameliorate

High TA
and
High pH

Reduce pH
Reduce TA
(if needed)

High tartaric acid,
possibly high potassium

  • Acidify with tartaric acid + MLF + cold stabilize
  • Blend with low-TA/low-pH juice or wine
High TA
and
High pH

Reduce pH
Reduce TA
(if needed)

High malic acid,
possibly high potassium

  • Acidify with tartaric acid + ferment with malic-degrading yeast + MLF (style permitting) + cold stabilize
  • Blend with low-TA/low-pH juice or wine
Techniques in Home Winemaking
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