A friend of mine is in the wine business in Napa, CA, USA. He gave me a used, 53 gal Saury wine barrel. I’ve been using it this last year just as a decoration in my den. Now that I’m trying to design a brew shed for my hobby, I thought about using it as a water reservoir for recycling cooling water. But, after looking at the markings and doing a little internet searching, I think I have a used, French White Oak, Burgandy keg. It would take me the better part of a year to fill it for aging and I’d lose the ability to evaluate different washes, etc with a year’s production in one barrel. So, using it for aging doesn’t seem to make sense right now.
However, using it for recycling water seems like a sin! Guess I could disassemble it and make aging sticks. Anybody have any good suggestions?
You could cut in half, use one half for a coffee table in your man cave come still room and use the other half to make a variety of homemade sticks for aging. Medium toasted, heavy toasted, and charred and do some experimenting with what suits your palate.
Thanks Copperhead. That’s what I’m wrestling with. From all my reading here, French Oak is not all that easy to come by and I don’t want to make some boneheaded decision that wastes it. I just can’t fill a 53 gallon keg and live long enough to enjoy it! Does the Beatles tune “When I’m 64” ring any bells?
It’s really a nice piece of work, so, I’d like to preserve it, but, making toasted sticks ma be the best use.
It's just a bunch of french oak staves not a piece of precious art. Since you or many of us can't fill a barrel of that size just dissemble it and have an almost lifetime oak to add to aging jars. We pitch a few dozen of those barrels away each year at the winery, having that much used french oak at my disposal I still prefer a nice new small Gibbs barrel for my spirits.
Thanks OVZ. That’s exactly what I did. And you are right, I now have more Oak than I’ll need for a long, long time.
I know it’s not art, but, when you’re not in that liner of work, where you can discard them, they seem a little more special and they are hard to come by in our part of the world!
I understand the Bourbon producers only use a barrel one time. What is the norm in the wine industry?
i think i'd cut it to cubes and use a chisel to knock off the outside (never know what was "on" it) then i'd alligator char the newly exposed side.
leave the wine side - the wine will give over a nice fruit note in finished whiskey or rum.
one of the crafties here is using ex - wine and his first release has an unmistakable apricot flavour note. damn decent for a young whiskey.
french oak is spicier than 'merican. really nice spank for a whiskey.
A couple of weeks ago I picked up a once used wine barrel made with Hungarian Oak for 10 bucks. A very well made barrel made by "Trust" barrels. They sell new for Hundreds of dollars. I was lucky enough to buy the used barrel from a friend who is in the business.
I cut the barrel in half, and made staves with one side and gave the other half to my wife for a planter box. She's happy, I'm happy, and my booze is happy.
JBC
JellybeanCorncob wrote:
I cut the barrel in half, and made staves with one side and gave the other half to my wife for a planter box. She's happy, I'm happy, and my booze is happy.
JBC