marino
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2014
- Messages
- 145
- Reaction score
- 25
Hi everyone,
I'd like to know how to speed my new American oak barrel to become neutral. Before you ask me why I would want to do this and tell me that I am being impatient and maybe wasting the possibilities of what new oak can do for me, let me explain the situation:
Before I knew about Vadai barrels, I bought a few small American medium toast barrels (in June 2014) to put port kits in. I've had cheap commercial port in these barrels since February but have just noticed that the wine has become over-oaked (yes, I checked in on it every month and it seemed fine). The trouble is that I have made a few its now but have more barrels than wine to put in it. so I'd like to help one of my 10L American barrels go neutral a little faster so that I won't have to worry about pulling my Porto Corinto kit out of it to avoid over-oaking and have to make more kits to keep something in the barrel.
I have had the Porto Corinto kit in the 10L American for about 6 weeks and it is already showing signs of "spicyness" from the oak. I really like how that wine started out and would like to see it progress nicely. I have the LaBodega kit in a Vadai barrel and that seems to be going along pretty slowly, which is great.
I am starting an Amarone now that I've read can go into neutral oak
The ultimate goal is to have one of the barrels as a blending barrel I can drink from every once in a while but I am obviously unable to do that yet.
I talked to some port people in portugal who tell me that this overoaking would have been slowed if I had fermented wine in the barrels first, before putting anything in for ageing.
So the question is, what can I do to move one or two of the barrels closer to neutral to avoid over oaking? Will I be forced to keep putting new wine in them until they go neutral? Will I be forced to take the wine out and find some way of storing it dry? Should I just put brandy that will eventually be used fortify port in the new barrels?
Thanks for sticking with the post and thanks in advance for your insight.
Marino
I'd like to know how to speed my new American oak barrel to become neutral. Before you ask me why I would want to do this and tell me that I am being impatient and maybe wasting the possibilities of what new oak can do for me, let me explain the situation:
Before I knew about Vadai barrels, I bought a few small American medium toast barrels (in June 2014) to put port kits in. I've had cheap commercial port in these barrels since February but have just noticed that the wine has become over-oaked (yes, I checked in on it every month and it seemed fine). The trouble is that I have made a few its now but have more barrels than wine to put in it. so I'd like to help one of my 10L American barrels go neutral a little faster so that I won't have to worry about pulling my Porto Corinto kit out of it to avoid over-oaking and have to make more kits to keep something in the barrel.
I have had the Porto Corinto kit in the 10L American for about 6 weeks and it is already showing signs of "spicyness" from the oak. I really like how that wine started out and would like to see it progress nicely. I have the LaBodega kit in a Vadai barrel and that seems to be going along pretty slowly, which is great.
I am starting an Amarone now that I've read can go into neutral oak
The ultimate goal is to have one of the barrels as a blending barrel I can drink from every once in a while but I am obviously unable to do that yet.
I talked to some port people in portugal who tell me that this overoaking would have been slowed if I had fermented wine in the barrels first, before putting anything in for ageing.
So the question is, what can I do to move one or two of the barrels closer to neutral to avoid over oaking? Will I be forced to keep putting new wine in them until they go neutral? Will I be forced to take the wine out and find some way of storing it dry? Should I just put brandy that will eventually be used fortify port in the new barrels?
Thanks for sticking with the post and thanks in advance for your insight.
Marino