smooth white aged harsh
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- Bootlegger
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smooth white aged harsh
Been distilling for a couple years. mostly corn based recipes. 60=80% corn with 6row barley and either wheat or rye making up the rest. Ran through a pot still always doing a strip run and a spirit run. So when we cut it down and take some heart down to 80-90 it is sweet smooth and I get great compliments on it, better then off the shelf stuff. When I age it on charred oak it actually gets harsher and is nowhere near as good as it is in white form. I age at 125 proof in 32oz jars for 6 week-2 months with char 3 oak spirals.
Currently I'm trying to test stuff so I have 4 jars with different combos and amounts of charred oak sticks and spirals in there and have them in there for 3 months. Looking to take them off soon but want to reach out for some tips
Feel like I'm doing what most I've read on here are doing but not getting great results. What can I be doing better?
Currently I'm trying to test stuff so I have 4 jars with different combos and amounts of charred oak sticks and spirals in there and have them in there for 3 months. Looking to take them off soon but want to reach out for some tips
Feel like I'm doing what most I've read on here are doing but not getting great results. What can I be doing better?
- HDNB
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
I have always found an awkward stage in oak aging from 6 weeks to six months.
frsh white up to six weeks it's really nice....after six months it gets better and better, between then? it's harsh.
maybe you are finding the same thing?
frsh white up to six weeks it's really nice....after six months it gets better and better, between then? it's harsh.
maybe you are finding the same thing?
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- fizzix
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
This has been popping up lately it seems. Was the oak seasoned and charred? Or fresh cut and charred?
And ditto HDNB. Had some Odin's Cornflake I more than once almost threw out. When it was white, and then young in a barrel. It's friggin' dynamite now some 7~8 months later!
And ditto HDNB. Had some Odin's Cornflake I more than once almost threw out. When it was white, and then young in a barrel. It's friggin' dynamite now some 7~8 months later!
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- Bootlegger
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Not sure if it was seasoned It was charred for sure. The spirals were just prepackaged ones used for flavoring spirits. The stave I bought off amazon I believe someone on here recommended them because its a guy doing it not a mass produced thing. But i can't find the link. below is the spirals
https://www.amazon.com/Oak-Infusion-Spi ... oak+staves" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
https://www.amazon.com/Oak-Infusion-Spi ... oak+staves" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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- Swill Maker
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
I'd have to agree. You're in that funky aging period that makes you question if you did anything right at all.
Put it away somewhere and forget about it for 6 months, then come back and check. There's some magic that happens around that 6 month mark. You'll be fine.
Put it away somewhere and forget about it for 6 months, then come back and check. There's some magic that happens around that 6 month mark. You'll be fine.
- Saltbush Bill
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Try some toasted oak instead of charred , you may like that better.
Still dragon sell a very good product called "Dominoes" they come in a range of oak types , toasts and chars.
Ive found them to be excellent.
Spirals are known to have a lot of end grain and are not ideal in my opinion.Steve3730 wrote:char 3 oak spirals.
Still dragon sell a very good product called "Dominoes" they come in a range of oak types , toasts and chars.
Ive found them to be excellent.
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- Bootlegger
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Ya i read that on here and ordered the charred staves. right now I have a couple jars with the last spirals i had and staves and a couple with just stavesSaltbush Bill wrote:Try some toasted oak instead of charred , you may like that better.Spirals are known to have a lot of end grain and are not ideal in my opinion.Steve3730 wrote:char 3 oak spirals.
Still dragon sell a very good product called "Dominoes" they come in a range of oak types , toasts and chars.
Ive found them to be excellent.
what is a good amount of oak to add to 32oz jars? Think I have 3-4 piece of wood in each jar right now. They are about 5" long 1/2"x 1/2" diameter
I will let them sit 6 months before i pull them off the oak.
- Saltbush Bill
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Is that 32 fluid oz? , if so that equates to 0.946353 of a Liter, that's way to much oak in my opinion, 1 stick that size would be enough.Steve3730 wrote:what is a good amount of oak to add to 32oz jars? Think I have 3-4 piece of wood in each jar right now. They are about 5" long 1/2"x 1/2" diameter
With Domino's use half an average sized domino to 1 liter of spirit. They are very easy to split down the middle using a sharp knife.
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- Bootlegger
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
I tried doing one stick but after 3 months the likker hardly even had a tint to it. So i added 2 more. I've attached a picture of what I currently have and the stick I'm using
- FL Brewer
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
I use 3 sticks about 8x1/2x1 inch in a gallon of 120 proof whiskey. The oak comes from a half Jack Daniels barrel from Home Depot. I wrap them in aluminum foil, toast at 400 degrees for about an hour and a half, then char, rinse with clean water, and add to the gallon jug. The whiskey gets the nice reddish brown color and flavor pretty quickly, but is not overoaked after 30 weeks of stress aging (swapping in and out of the freezer almost every day). I agree with Saltbush Bill, I think you're using a little too much oak. I may even cut back to two sticks as an experiment next batch.
My first couple batches, I didn't toast the oak, and I got a harsh, bitter, tannic flavor I didn't like at all in the whiskey. Toasting the oak before charring completely eliminates the tannin in the flavor, at least as far as my taste buds can tell.
My first couple batches, I didn't toast the oak, and I got a harsh, bitter, tannic flavor I didn't like at all in the whiskey. Toasting the oak before charring completely eliminates the tannin in the flavor, at least as far as my taste buds can tell.
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- Saltbush Bill
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Those sticks look to be pretty heavily charred , I find that a light char or or medium to heavy toast gives more colour and flavour.Steve3730 wrote:I've attached a picture of what I currently have and the stick I'm using
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
Agreed. I used to use 1/2" x 1/2" x 7" sticks, 4 per gallon. Now using 1" x 1" x 4" per quart and that's plenty IMO.Saltbush Bill wrote:Is that 32 fluid oz? , if so that equates to 0.946353 of a Liter, that's way to much oak in my opinion, 1 stick that size would be enough.Steve3730 wrote:what is a good amount of oak to add to 32oz jars? Think I have 3-4 piece of wood in each jar right now. They are about 5" long 1/2"x 1/2" diameter
With Domino's use half an average sized domino to 1 liter of spirit. They are very easy to split down the middle using a sharp knife.
Swedish Pride wrote:
get a brix reading on said ball bearings and then you can find out how much fermentables are in there
get a brix reading on said ball bearings and then you can find out how much fermentables are in there
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- Bootlegger
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
So Dominoes>Staves>Spirals
Can you guys recommend where you buy the dominoes you use? I'd like to try some with lighter chars. I have 1 gallon of hearts that I'd like to get on wood but want to make sure I'm getting it on the right stuff so its sitting on the best possible and I get improvement at the end of aging. Thanks for the help guys
Can you guys recommend where you buy the dominoes you use? I'd like to try some with lighter chars. I have 1 gallon of hearts that I'd like to get on wood but want to make sure I'm getting it on the right stuff so its sitting on the best possible and I get improvement at the end of aging. Thanks for the help guys
- HDNB
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
the BBQ supply place. i like mclean's ex- bourbon barrel smoking chunks.
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
I'd recommend going to a local saw mill or lumber supplier and ask for a white oak plank. You can then do what you want with it!
Swedish Pride wrote:
get a brix reading on said ball bearings and then you can find out how much fermentables are in there
get a brix reading on said ball bearings and then you can find out how much fermentables are in there
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- Bootlegger
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
And just char the wood myself in the stove or on the grill?
- still_stirrin
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
+1.HDNB wrote:the BBQ supply place. i like mclean's ex- bourbon barrel smoking chunks.
I’ve used these quite successfully. You can add char if you’d like. Don’t really need to toast them tho. The stave chunks will float at first until saturated, then they’ll sink.
Mclean’s are great if you can find them. Or, order online. Comes in “bourbon”, “wine”, and “rum” too.
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- Saltbush Bill
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
As far as I know the only place selling proper dominoes is Still Dragon. They sell them by the KG / Pound.Steve3730 wrote:Can you guys recommend where you buy the dominoes you use? I'd like to try some with lighter chars.
They are a commercially produced product made for use in the wine industry, however they also work exceptionally well in spirits.
- raketemensch
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
You can also buy chunks pre-seasoned on EBay.
- raketemensch
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
You can also buy chunks pre-seasoned on EBay.
- Saltbush Bill
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Re: smooth white aged harsh
http://stilldragon.com/index.php/oak-adjuncts.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
Dont know where in the world you are here is the North American site, they also have AU and Europe.
Dont know where in the world you are here is the North American site, they also have AU and Europe.