aging in wood kegs
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aging in wood kegs
i have been aging a neutral spirit for 3 months now in a charred white oak keg and the product smells and taste like wood...can someone help me with this ???
thanks
thanks
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- Trainee
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Yeah a neutral spirit isn't going to do anything but take on the flavor of the wood.
whiskey is aged in charred american white oak barrels. It helps add flavor to the whiskey. Neutral spirits have no flavor to blend with the oak.
If you redistill, the oak flavor should pretty much dissapear.
Interesting though you have made oak flavored vodka.
whiskey is aged in charred american white oak barrels. It helps add flavor to the whiskey. Neutral spirits have no flavor to blend with the oak.
If you redistill, the oak flavor should pretty much dissapear.
Interesting though you have made oak flavored vodka.
I just did the Bundaberg Rum tour here in Australia a few weeks ago.
They still water diluted molasses and when it comes out its pretty well flavourless(I smelt and tasted it). Its not until they age it for two years in the oak vats that it gets it taste
I would of thought that the flavourless spirit I tasted would of got a wood tastes as well?
They still water diluted molasses and when it comes out its pretty well flavourless(I smelt and tasted it). Its not until they age it for two years in the oak vats that it gets it taste
I would of thought that the flavourless spirit I tasted would of got a wood tastes as well?
Here froggy froggy..
Shane
Our reading material:
The Compleat Distiller
Making Pure Corn Whiskey
Shane
Our reading material:
The Compleat Distiller
Making Pure Corn Whiskey
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- Swill Maker
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If you are wanting to start from neutral spirits you could try soaking your neutral spirits in whisky chips (chips from old whiskey barrels). You can speed up the process by alternating every 3-4 days from room temperature to fridge temperature (to emulate the seasons). This will speed up the aging. when taste and colour is to your liking you will have a very passable whiskey. You can also add essences from whisky kits to vary the flavour to suit your taste. A good way to begin to understand the effects of flavours and aging while havin something to sup
Never do tomorrow what you can do today because if you like what you do today you can do it AGAIN tomorrow!
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- Trainee
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Whiskey is made with an all grain mash. The parent site has all kinds of info on grain mashes. If you put a neutral spirit in oak all you get is oak flavoured vodka. Grain spirits (whiskey) has flavour of grain(s) even when it's white. But it must be distilled correctly. If you run a grain mash through a reflux and pull it of 90-95% you got vodka. If you pull it off below 80% you got whiskey.
Do a bit of reasearch first and then ask questions.
Do a bit of reasearch first and then ask questions.
Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will sit in a boat all day and drink beer.
Yeah dude. Just like UR and I both told you. And Do some damn reading newb!! didn't I tell you first that you just made some oak flavored vodka.
For Whiskey, use grain, then use a potstill to distill it. ITs basic freaking info that you should have picked up on.
Ignorance is no excuse for stupidity!!!
And also if you want to call it a genuine whiskey. Don't use those essences on neutral alcohol. Its not the same by any standards. Just cheap, quick, cheating ways to make your crap good.
Please read, read, read, read. Then ask a halfway intelligent question on basic knowledge that is very common knowledge.
Does your momma know your making alcohol? Oh I can't wait till' uncle jesse gets on and rips you a new one....
For Whiskey, use grain, then use a potstill to distill it. ITs basic freaking info that you should have picked up on.
Ignorance is no excuse for stupidity!!!
And also if you want to call it a genuine whiskey. Don't use those essences on neutral alcohol. Its not the same by any standards. Just cheap, quick, cheating ways to make your crap good.
Please read, read, read, read. Then ask a halfway intelligent question on basic knowledge that is very common knowledge.
Does your momma know your making alcohol? Oh I can't wait till' uncle jesse gets on and rips you a new one....
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- Master of Distillation
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- Distiller
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UR is right on the money there Brewster.
The grain flavors mingle with the toasted or charred wood in a barrel. I did some sugar wash on wood in the beginning, and it tasted sort of flat, and was missing somthing.
After making some grain based mashes, the product was just what I hoped for.
The grain flavors mingle with the toasted or charred wood in a barrel. I did some sugar wash on wood in the beginning, and it tasted sort of flat, and was missing somthing.
After making some grain based mashes, the product was just what I hoped for.
Hey guys!!! Watch this.... OUCH!