
Do my Angels have wings or sneakers.
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Do my Angels have wings or sneakers.
I filled a 2 Gal. oak barrel with some fine corn whiskey (up to the top) back in April. I checked on it today and quite a bit is gone. I realize the angels get their sip but I would estimate a little over a quart is missing. Should that much be missing or are my angels wearing tennis shoes? 

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Isn't sealing the outside defeating the purpose of using a barrel for aging. The booze has gotta be able to breathe, no?tater wrote:I took hot wax and using torch covered outside of my 1 gallon keg to slow down the angles.Small kegs evaporate a lot.
I have a 23 liter keg (5 gallon) it's been sitting full since summer and I haven't lost more than an ounce or 2. Maybe the angels up here in Canada aren't as thirsty as their American cousins?

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A lot also has to do with the make-up of the barrel ... i.e. how porous the wood is ... and also how hot it actually got where you kept the barrel.
I'd just top it off and move it to a cooler location if possible.
cheers
~r~
p.s. it's also possible to have an "angel" within the household sampling.
I'd just top it off and move it to a cooler location if possible.
cheers
~r~
p.s. it's also possible to have an "angel" within the household sampling.

"If it weren't for the alcohol, beer would be a healthfood."
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Wasn't sealed under bands and still looses some to the angles.Before sealing it I was loosen close to a qt every six months now about a pint a year.Getting ready to fill it with the fruit and honey likker I just ran.Reckin the angles here like to sample often on that little keg had rye in it for last 5 yearsUncle Remus wrote:Isn't sealing the outside defeating the purpose of using a barrel for aging. The booze has gotta be able to breathe, no?tater wrote:I took hot wax and using torch covered outside of my 1 gallon keg to slow down the angles.Small kegs evaporate a lot.
I have a 23 liter keg (5 gallon) it's been sitting full since summer and I haven't lost more than an ounce or 2. Maybe the angels up here in Canada aren't as thirsty as their American cousins?

I use a pot still.Sometimes with a thumper
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When I got my small keg a few years ago (used it to store Port) the manufacturer took great pains in instructing that the keg should never be sealed in any manner as it would prevent the wine from maturing. Don't know if the same holds for spirit storage.
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Nope didnt hurt me a bit, fine likker. Somehow the angels got in the bottle I brought home, cause they done went and drank it all gone.tater wrote:No don't raise bees , The rye that was aged in keg tasted good to me if ya like charred grain licker Transplanted Hillbilly was here . Didn't seem to hurt him none either

My one gallaon barrel loses a fair amout too. I keep a half gallon of whats in it, beside it, and top it up a couple times. Works for me, plus I always pickup around 10 ABV in the barrel aging process. That is for a year + aging time.
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angel's share
It's going to be different according to your location and the proof of the distillate in the barrel. Also your storage conditions are a factor.
In one traditional method, barrels go up on the top floor of a warehouse where it's nice and hot in the summer and nice and cool in the winter. This expansion and contraction of the barrel creates the "breathing" which gives the spirit a lot of character. Barrels are rolled down a floor every year or so and end up in a nice cool cellar to finish off.
However you also get evaporation, more in arid areas like California than in humid areas like Georgia. Here in California it's very hot on the valley floor but more temperate in the mountains which will also have it's effects.
I hear the angel's share for tequila distilleries is insanely high but I don't have any numbers to back that up. I've heard people in the industry who work as importers talk about it. However I can guarantee it's quite hot in Mexico most of the year.
Be sure you treat your barrel right before filling it. The tighter your seams the less evaporation. Pick quality barrels if you can where the wood mates up well.
In one traditional method, barrels go up on the top floor of a warehouse where it's nice and hot in the summer and nice and cool in the winter. This expansion and contraction of the barrel creates the "breathing" which gives the spirit a lot of character. Barrels are rolled down a floor every year or so and end up in a nice cool cellar to finish off.
However you also get evaporation, more in arid areas like California than in humid areas like Georgia. Here in California it's very hot on the valley floor but more temperate in the mountains which will also have it's effects.
I hear the angel's share for tequila distilleries is insanely high but I don't have any numbers to back that up. I've heard people in the industry who work as importers talk about it. However I can guarantee it's quite hot in Mexico most of the year.
Be sure you treat your barrel right before filling it. The tighter your seams the less evaporation. Pick quality barrels if you can where the wood mates up well.
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I have a friend that makes barrels at Bluegrass Cooperage. I'll ask him again but I do believe he told me the barrels are shipped "wet" to the distillers. They are filled and allowed to swell for the pressure check and then drained and bunged. I have seen this in a few videos also. I don't think that the surface area and thickness of wood would absorb too much even if it were dry. A lot of the "Angel's Share" is from bona fide leakers. Most warehouses have a dedicated leak finder to make sure the stuff is not disappearing that way.
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The barrel I bought was wrapped in shrink wrap. I filled it with clean water and it leaked like a sieve for a day or so and then tightened right up. Then I filled it with whiskey . The only real loss I had was one day I checked it and it was down a little so I topped it up. A day later I lit a fire in the stove and things warmed up and the keg puked out the bung....duh, live and learn I guess.
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.