Hello, First time poster and new winemaker here.
This season, my cousin and I are taking over the "old guard" of family winemaking and making a barrel of wine from Lodi/Northern Valley Syrah and Grenache.
We have access to used bourbon barrels and will be both fermenting and aging in barrels. Typically, the old guard (my parents, uncles and grandfather, think old-time Italian Americans that have been doing this since crushing grapes with feet was the norm) seemed to embrace both the bourbon aroma and char that these imparted but that is not something I typically gravitate toward and instead would prefer something closer to a neutral oak.
I do not feel comfortable completely reconditioning the barrel so I was planning on doing a cleaning procedure first with sodium carbonate (soda ash) and then citric acid. However, I am not a chemist and I don't know if the soda ash will be effective in neutralizing some of the bourbon and char flavors or if it is just useful for killing organic matter. Furthermore, I keep reading that soda ash is kind of a "last resort" and am wondering if I should avoid it all together. However, if I am ok with neutral oak, it seems I shouldn't mind the soda ash treatment. On the other hand, we do have someone that can take the barrel apart and reconstruct so if another solution and some elbow grease would do, I think I'd prefer that.
That said, I guess my question is, can I use a soda ash solution to remove some of the bourbon and char flavor from a used bourbon barrel if I am aiming at neutral oak.
Thanks for the help and looking forward to contributing more to these informative forums
This season, my cousin and I are taking over the "old guard" of family winemaking and making a barrel of wine from Lodi/Northern Valley Syrah and Grenache.
We have access to used bourbon barrels and will be both fermenting and aging in barrels. Typically, the old guard (my parents, uncles and grandfather, think old-time Italian Americans that have been doing this since crushing grapes with feet was the norm) seemed to embrace both the bourbon aroma and char that these imparted but that is not something I typically gravitate toward and instead would prefer something closer to a neutral oak.
I do not feel comfortable completely reconditioning the barrel so I was planning on doing a cleaning procedure first with sodium carbonate (soda ash) and then citric acid. However, I am not a chemist and I don't know if the soda ash will be effective in neutralizing some of the bourbon and char flavors or if it is just useful for killing organic matter. Furthermore, I keep reading that soda ash is kind of a "last resort" and am wondering if I should avoid it all together. However, if I am ok with neutral oak, it seems I shouldn't mind the soda ash treatment. On the other hand, we do have someone that can take the barrel apart and reconstruct so if another solution and some elbow grease would do, I think I'd prefer that.
That said, I guess my question is, can I use a soda ash solution to remove some of the bourbon and char flavor from a used bourbon barrel if I am aiming at neutral oak.
Thanks for the help and looking forward to contributing more to these informative forums