oak on the way
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- Bootlegger
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- Location: west tennessee
oak on the way
ordered an oak barrell today if I can just make something worthy of putting in it Ill be set. How long yall think It will need to stay in or just stick in there and forget about it.
whats life without a challenge
Depends on how long you're willing to wait I guess. Personally I would use oak chips to get the same effect without losing any whiskey due to the keg breathing.......Up to 30% or more.
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- Angel's Share
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- Master of Distillation
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- Bootlegger
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- Rumrunner
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Just clean water is fine. Leave it in a few days. It took about 6 or 7 months for my 15 gallon barrels to surpass oak cubes, charred white oak, and maple syrup. In the long run the barrel is supperior. If you must get into it now and then to sample, replace the popular bung with a redwood one fron grape and grainery. Turn the barrel every week or so to keep the bung hole wet less it crack. Keep the barrel in a non climate controled place. The amount of flavor in the barrel will determine how long you need to leave it in. A strong whiskey flavor = longer, sugar whiskey = shorter. Best is fill it in cold weather, let it go through at least one summer and back to cold weather again. Keep it in a cool dry place until you can fill it. best to leave in in the box in a basement. Actually you should have had the whiskey ready before ordering. I will be taking out my lightest after one year, then another heavier at two, and the best at three years.
You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, and them's pretty good odds.
Barrel
Rockycreek gave you some good advise. When your new barrel arrives fill it with water untill you are ready to use it, keep adding water untill it quits leaking. When you drain the water cover the bung hole with screen wire to keep the (loose) charcole in. If you keep it full for at least two weeks and put your whiskey in at 130 proof your angeles share will be very little. If at all posible stay out of it for at least a year (in a new barrel it will be fair by then). Remember to dilute down to 100 proof or less with good spring water. 100 proof for mixed drinks, 80 proof for burbon on the rocks is a good place to start.
I hope you ordered your barrel drilled for a spigot, and got a spigot too.
If you did'nt be sure to use copper tubing for a sifleing hose and don't sifle from the bottom (that's where the loose charcole settles to).
Good luck and remember, The secret to making good whiskey is to make more than you can possibaly drink.
I hope you ordered your barrel drilled for a spigot, and got a spigot too.
If you did'nt be sure to use copper tubing for a sifleing hose and don't sifle from the bottom (that's where the loose charcole settles to).
Good luck and remember, The secret to making good whiskey is to make more than you can possibaly drink.
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- Bootlegger
- Posts: 107
- Joined: Fri Sep 22, 2006 11:32 pm
- Location: west tennessee