Something I did not know before reading this article:

Contrary to intuition, astringency is actually not a taste, but rather a tactile perception
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Contrary to intuition, astringency is actually not a taste, but rather a tactile perception
Makes sense. Astringent is something I intuitively thought of as my skin tightening up or shrinking more than it seemed like a taste. I guess this confirms my senses are working properly, thank goodness.Single Malt Yinzer wrote:https://talesofthecocktail.com/in-depth ... stringency
Something I did not know before reading this article:
Contrary to intuition, astringency is actually not a taste, but rather a tactile perception
I don't know much about it other what's in that article. I know that heads & tannins (over oaking) can cause astringency. I assume that the chemicals responsible oxidize/react out eventually. As long as the spirit can breathe it should come around.OtisT wrote:Do you know if aging on oak (or something else) reduces astringency? I recently made a Chocolate Bourbon that is a bit astringent. It's sitting on oak now, so in a year I may be able to answer this myself.
It was astringent fresh off the still, so definitely not over oaking. A few others have commented recently that their chocolate bourbons also turned out a bit astringent, so I am assuming it is the British Chocolate malt or the British Black Crystal malt I used.Single Malt Yinzer wrote:I know that heads & tannins (over oaking) can cause astringency.