The Wiki for Tale 4 is in read-only mode and is available for archival and reference purposes only. Please visit the current Tale 11 Wiki in the meantime.

If you have any issues with this Wiki, please post in #wiki-editing on Discord or contact Brad in-game.

Difference between revisions of "User:Aphenro/Vines/Tannin"

From A Tale in the Desert
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 6: Line 6:
 
You’re an aspiring chemist and you want/need to make some Wood, Worm or Grain spirits in an alembic. Surfing through the wiki you read that you need wine with high tannin. You’ve got your grapes; you load them into the barrel and wait.  Periodically you siphon off a sample and check the tannin level. Unfortunately the levels are not going up very fast.  Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to predict which grapes will give the most tannin. Well now we can. As it turns out tannin is developed in wine from three characteristics, colour (C), skin (K) and patience (time). In fact the formula is <i>relatively</i> straight forward.
 
You’re an aspiring chemist and you want/need to make some Wood, Worm or Grain spirits in an alembic. Surfing through the wiki you read that you need wine with high tannin. You’ve got your grapes; you load them into the barrel and wait.  Periodically you siphon off a sample and check the tannin level. Unfortunately the levels are not going up very fast.  Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to predict which grapes will give the most tannin. Well now we can. As it turns out tannin is developed in wine from three characteristics, colour (C), skin (K) and patience (time). In fact the formula is <i>relatively</i> straight forward.
  
[[Image:Tannin_Equation.GIF|Tannin Equation]|{width}400]
+
[[Image:Tannin_Equation.GIF|Tannin Equation|{width}400]]
  
 
From this you can see that the maximum tannin possible is the colour value multiplied by the skin value divided by 100.  So when you pick with vines/garpes to use you must also look for a C phenome. Colour is just as important as skin! Having wine with a skin value of 300 but a colour value of 10 will only yield 30 tannin. But if you could <i>magically</i> take 100 points from skin and put them into colour the maximum tannin jumps to 220 (110 X 200 / 100).  
 
From this you can see that the maximum tannin possible is the colour value multiplied by the skin value divided by 100.  So when you pick with vines/garpes to use you must also look for a C phenome. Colour is just as important as skin! Having wine with a skin value of 300 but a colour value of 10 will only yield 30 tannin. But if you could <i>magically</i> take 100 points from skin and put them into colour the maximum tannin jumps to 220 (110 X 200 / 100).  
  
 
Furthermore you won’t have to guess how long you have to wait for the tannin to develop. After 21 Egypt days (approximately a RL week) the wine in the barrel will have developed half its maximum tannin.  If you can wait another 21 Egypt days that value will rise to 75% of maximum.
 
Furthermore you won’t have to guess how long you have to wait for the tannin to develop. After 21 Egypt days (approximately a RL week) the wine in the barrel will have developed half its maximum tannin.  If you can wait another 21 Egypt days that value will rise to 75% of maximum.

Revision as of 14:41, 17 October 2009

This is a work in progress. Unfortunately I captured my first set of data using real days instead of both Egypt and real days. I'm currently capturing better data to support my hypothesis and confirm the 21 in the exponential. This may affect the rate at which the tannin level approaches the maximum but the maximum C*K likely won't require an adjustment. Stay tuned.

Understanding Tannin

You’re an aspiring chemist and you want/need to make some Wood, Worm or Grain spirits in an alembic. Surfing through the wiki you read that you need wine with high tannin. You’ve got your grapes; you load them into the barrel and wait. Periodically you siphon off a sample and check the tannin level. Unfortunately the levels are not going up very fast. Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to predict which grapes will give the most tannin. Well now we can. As it turns out tannin is developed in wine from three characteristics, colour (C), skin (K) and patience (time). In fact the formula is relatively straight forward.

{width}400

From this you can see that the maximum tannin possible is the colour value multiplied by the skin value divided by 100. So when you pick with vines/garpes to use you must also look for a C phenome. Colour is just as important as skin! Having wine with a skin value of 300 but a colour value of 10 will only yield 30 tannin. But if you could magically take 100 points from skin and put them into colour the maximum tannin jumps to 220 (110 X 200 / 100).

Furthermore you won’t have to guess how long you have to wait for the tannin to develop. After 21 Egypt days (approximately a RL week) the wine in the barrel will have developed half its maximum tannin. If you can wait another 21 Egypt days that value will rise to 75% of maximum.