Gotcha. When I use shredded oak for reds, it gets discarded with the pomace.
This leads into fermentation vs aging oak.
My research in this area has been for reds, where the oak provides "sacrificial tannins" which drop instead of the natural grape tannins. However, I haven't looked into the same for whites, so I don't know (yet, anyway!) how the concept applies to whites, or if it does.
If there is an application, then using shredded oak and discarding it at the first racking and switching to solid oak makes sense. If there isn't an application, then what you're planning makes sense.
This gives me something new to research. Wine research is a never ending topic!
EDIT: I posted too quickly. A 5 minute research turned up a couple of interesting points.
From an
article on WineMakerMag:
For white wines, fermentation tannins do a really good job of refining structure, preventing hazes, and assisting in the release and stabilization of aromatic compounds.
From
The Beverage People (commercial product sales), this regards the product FT Blanc Soft:
Derived from oak gall nuts. Used in White and Rosé wines to:
- Help protect against oxidation
- Enhance texture and improve mouth feel of finished wine
I found a couple other references that agree with the above, so at first blush it appears that fermentation oak in white wine produces a different result than in reds, but equally valuable.
Based upon research and experience with reds, you may want to consider a product with more surface area to get better exposure during fermentation. For reds the wine/oak interaction during fermentation is distinctly different from aging, and it appears it is for whites as well.
YMMV