you can create your own extract(s) with grain alcohol, I have wondered what BSG (France) and Sinatin (Canada) actually have in them. Scott Labs has a commercial kit for bench trials with their entire product line.Oak extract might be good if you are bench testing different levels of oak. But I use cubes.
Hi, Yes... I use liquid oak... and was warned that it only takes a few drops to make a difference. I use frozen skins and stems to give body and am working with the oak liquid just recently to try vs Oak chips. I made one batch of Zinfandel, but I didn't realize that the oak liquid bottle didn't have a dribble top and it poured in about 1/3 of the small bottle of oak. The result was quite pleasing... came out something like the California wine "Smoking Loon" with a heavy burnt oak barrel taste to the wine... great if you like that kind of thing. I am trying to do more tests but have to wait with age. At 6 months, my wine kits with the liquid oak have a very good flavour with the skins added to the fermentation process. I'm going to try a port style Cabernet using the liquid oak for a quick treat come the new year. Best of luck!curious if anyone uses Liquid oak extract in any of their wines?
If yes... which vino types and can ya share any tips/tricks?
Cheers!
Thanks for the feedback. I'm looking to just use a small amount in some dry Rose as a variety -- and to save time from my typical use of Oak Spirals in extended aging...which won't be happening in this instance.Hi, Yes... I use liquid oak... and was warned that it only takes a few drops to make a difference. I use frozen skins and stems to give body and am working with the oak liquid just recently to try vs Oak chips. I made one batch of Zinfandel, but I didn't realize that the oak liquid bottle didn't have a dribble top and it poured in about 1/3 of the small bottle of oak. The result was quite pleasing... came out something like the California wine "Smoking Loon" with a heavy burnt oak barrel taste to the wine... great if you like that kind of thing. I am trying to do more tests but have to wait with age. At 6 months, my wine kits with the liquid oak have a very good flavour with the skins added to the fermentation process. I'm going to try a port style Cabernet using the liquid oak for a quick treat come the new year. Best of luck!
I think that it is fairly consistent, although it is early in my trials to really know... I can't seem to age wine for more than a year right now due to Covid forced consumption levels to deter any viruses from ... you know.Thanks for the feedback. I'm looking to just use a small amount in some dry Rose as a variety -- and to save time from my typical use of Oak Spirals in extended aging...which won't be happening in this instance.
Do you notice much change in oak flavor over time or does it remain pretty consistent?
Cheers!
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