Great post Jocky!
Chunks for me then.
Going to put them in a `Red Ale`. Brewed this before with 100gr Tomahawk dry hop, `twas BLM.
Brewed also with 50gr Mosaic and 50gr Equanot dry hop, this was more BLM!
WA
This tap thing still won`t tork!
Oak aging?
- rpruen
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Re: Oak aging?
Thanks to you both for the tips. I have read those topics and the blog, so hopefully know what to expect.
Hopefully I'll know in a few months time
Regards
Richard
Hopefully I'll know in a few months time
Regards
Richard
- rpruen
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Re: Oak aging?
Thanks for all the tips.
I have made a barley wine, and dumped it into the barrel while still fermenting. My thoughts on this are that if it works for sherry casks, then its probably good enough for my beer. This will likely be a throw away batch, much as I hate to throw out good booze, experiments must be done.
I will keep you updated with how it goes, and how the contents taste when fermented out. I'm assuming the beer will be predominantly barrel flavoured at this point.
regards
Richard
I have made a barley wine, and dumped it into the barrel while still fermenting. My thoughts on this are that if it works for sherry casks, then its probably good enough for my beer. This will likely be a throw away batch, much as I hate to throw out good booze, experiments must be done.
I will keep you updated with how it goes, and how the contents taste when fermented out. I'm assuming the beer will be predominantly barrel flavoured at this point.
regards
Richard
- rpruen
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Re: Oak aging?
I had to give it a try, so tapped off about 30ml
Smell: boozy with vanilla notes (interesting as it certainly wouldn't smell like that normally) and a bit of smoke.
Taste: surprisingly sweet, vanilla again, and oak. The sweetness is possibly because it hasn't fermented out yet, but I'm almost sure it sweeter now than when it went into the barrel.
Looks: Pale amber gold (not much change, a bit darker maybe)
Nothing revolting so far, in fact it reminds me of desert wine a bit. The yeast seems to go a lot slower in oak, or it should have fermented out by now.
You might be right, bottling is a possibility, but I'm going to leave it a while longer, if things continue the way they are, I will have one unique barley wine.
Regards
Richard
Smell: boozy with vanilla notes (interesting as it certainly wouldn't smell like that normally) and a bit of smoke.
Taste: surprisingly sweet, vanilla again, and oak. The sweetness is possibly because it hasn't fermented out yet, but I'm almost sure it sweeter now than when it went into the barrel.
Looks: Pale amber gold (not much change, a bit darker maybe)
Nothing revolting so far, in fact it reminds me of desert wine a bit. The yeast seems to go a lot slower in oak, or it should have fermented out by now.
You might be right, bottling is a possibility, but I'm going to leave it a while longer, if things continue the way they are, I will have one unique barley wine.
Regards
Richard
- rpruen
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Re: Oak aging?
The result?
Contaminated bottle bombs it got way too carbonated, and thick and ropey with the smell of rotting pineapple. Pediococcus infection I suspect.
I'm going to have another go, but without the wooden tap, it's hard to clean and weeps ever so slightly. Possibly where the infection came from.
Regards
Richard
Contaminated bottle bombs it got way too carbonated, and thick and ropey with the smell of rotting pineapple. Pediococcus infection I suspect.
I'm going to have another go, but without the wooden tap, it's hard to clean and weeps ever so slightly. Possibly where the infection came from.
Regards
Richard
Re: Oak aging?
Does anyone have experience next of using oak smoking “powder” to impart some oak flavour?
I’m brewing an old style Keeping ale (albeit with Kveik yeast. Yeah, go figure!) and I plan to put a portion of it into a demijohn with some of my mixed ferm culture and I fancy a bit of oak character too. I have some oak smoking powder and thought a small quantity of that would give some degree of oak character. As it’s powder it has much more surface area than chips/chunks or a barrel, so I’m thinking for my 5L of beer a mere teaspoon of oak powder should suffice.
Thoughts/opinions?
I’m brewing an old style Keeping ale (albeit with Kveik yeast. Yeah, go figure!) and I plan to put a portion of it into a demijohn with some of my mixed ferm culture and I fancy a bit of oak character too. I have some oak smoking powder and thought a small quantity of that would give some degree of oak character. As it’s powder it has much more surface area than chips/chunks or a barrel, so I’m thinking for my 5L of beer a mere teaspoon of oak powder should suffice.
Thoughts/opinions?
Fermenting: pseudo “beyond the Firs” (Burnt mill beer clone), Geuze
Conditioning: English IPA/Bretted English IPA
Drinking: Sunshine Marmalade, Festbier, Helles Bock, Smokey lagery beer, Irish Export Stout, Orval clone, Impy stout, Duvel clone, Conestoga (American Barley wine), Dobbin 2 dark mild
Planning: Kozel dark (ish), Simmonds Bitter, Bitter, Citra PA and more!
Conditioning: English IPA/Bretted English IPA
Drinking: Sunshine Marmalade, Festbier, Helles Bock, Smokey lagery beer, Irish Export Stout, Orval clone, Impy stout, Duvel clone, Conestoga (American Barley wine), Dobbin 2 dark mild
Planning: Kozel dark (ish), Simmonds Bitter, Bitter, Citra PA and more!
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Re: Oak aging?
Sounds like it might work but I'd be wary of tiny particles of it being suspended in the beer.Cobnut wrote:Does anyone have experience next of using oak smoking “powder” to impart some oak flavour?
I’m brewing an old style Keeping ale (albeit with Kveik yeast. Yeah, go figure!) and I plan to put a portion of it into a demijohn with some of my mixed ferm culture and I fancy a bit of oak character too. I have some oak smoking powder and thought a small quantity of that would give some degree of oak character. As it’s powder it has much more surface area than chips/chunks or a barrel, so I’m thinking for my 5L of beer a mere teaspoon of oak powder should suffice.
Thoughts/opinions?
Are you filtering it before packaging? Also, maybe worth a quick experiment in water to see how it behaves in liquid.
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