PalCabral wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 8:10 am
You need to produce a lot of the same product though to be able to have a Solera system containing at least 3 generations, or is your Solera a blend of many different products? If it is the latter, the Solera will not only age with time but also evolve in taste and character as different blends from different products end up in it.
Depends on where ya wanna go:
LWTCS wrote: ↑Tue Jan 24, 2023 4:27 am
Any time I have ever created an infinity bottle I have always felt that (more often than not) the sum was mostly better than any individual addition.
To begin with… Let’s say, you wish
to get to always have at hand some “Canadian” style booze. Barbecue and so forth, for easy casual drinking. But not as flat as vodka + coke + ice.
Then take some whitedog corn shine. Add a fair qty. of barley&rye damn-over-oaked stuff. Drop a bit of weathered commercial Scotch from the bottom of an old bottle (why not, finally?)… Try different ratios on tiny samples. You’ll find something that to be way more complex and interesting than any separate component. Not bad thing is to keep the idea in your head all the time: it still has to be a recognizable Canuck... or Irish... etc.
PalCabral wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 8:10 am
I think for many hobby distillers, we move from one project to the next without building up enough stock to even have two generations.
This is your path. And your traffic rules. And you don't have to go all the way down to the bottom, or down to the Solera itself. Stop in the middle. Lemme explain.
Example #1. Let’s go hard. As Islay folks do. There are Lagavulin and Caol Ila. They seem to use the same peaty malt from Port Ellen. And run on similar pots. But Laga-16 and Ila-12 är olika djur. You want to get both from the common spirit run. How come? Take early hearts as 75..72% AbV and give them some ex-sherry staves. Take main hearts as 72..65% and give them a fair amount of toasted white oak. Take late hearts as 65..59% AbV and throw gatorskin burnt staves in. And after just a couple of years, lol… go get your Laga-16 as blended early&main&late hearts. And your Ila-12 as the unblended one. Maybe the late hearts will need more oak aging. But not 16 years, man
Example #2. Barley malt + unmalted barley + a bit of rye and oats. Let’s singlepot it / go triple-Irish. Well, 85..80 is okay as whitedog (just proof down to 40% and wait for a month only). Next, 80..70 is to be The Irishman (split it for different types of oak staves and blend later according to your taste). Finally… take some 70..65 and mix with “stripping run 45%-ish” and “middle run 27%-ish” = here’s your Poitín, either oaked or applewooded or who cares what else. So, 3 versions of 1 mashing project gotten: not bad, eh?