As promised:
We drew off each wine into a 750 ml. bottle and placed one cube in each sample. Two samples of each variety, one with French and one with American oak. Both medium toast plus.
At two and four weeks there was very little oak noticed in the samples.
We tasted again at eight weeks. Still not much. We decided to wait.
Three days ago, at twelve weeks (to the day, totally accidental), bingo! The oak is balanced to a little bit over-oaked. The tannin is pronounced.
There is a thread on this board that asserts that the wine near the oak tends to be over-oaked and that the wine that is not tends to have minimal oak qualities. The reason advanced is that there are no convection currents in bulked stored wine, so the effect tend to be localized. Seems to make sense. At least to someone who last took chemistry when there were lines at the gas pumps.
So we gently agitated the wine in the samples. No difference. However, these are relatively small samples. We will sample the bulked wine both as is and gently stirred to test this theory for ourselves.
Two observations that are important. The first is that the over all flavor of the samples is that of wine bottled too early/did not go through bulk aging. The difference between the wine in the experiment and the bulk stored wine was marked. The bulk aged wine, depending on the variety or blend, shows fruit, more or less complex flavors, and good mouthfeel. The stuff in the experiment is plonk. Plus, the periodic sampling introduces air. Depending on the bottle, the oxidation is between somewhat acceptable if consumed now and not on your tin type.
Another thing that came out of this experiment is that different oak species really do taste different. The effect on the varieties and blend are marked. While both of the beans used are acceptable, on the varietals there was a clear winner each time. Curiously, it was much tougher to choose for the blend. So we split the decision and the containers. Some get American, some get French.
Since we made a second run wine of one of the varietals and the blends, we will continue to make notes on the oak as we go. The second run wines will probably be bottled right before the crush in the fall. The first run wines will stay in bulk until at least December unless there is some kind of problem.
I'll continue to post the (subjective) results.
In the meantime, I wonder about under, over, and getting the oak just right. What is the effect of time on oak? Does over-oaked wine mellow with time? Is over-oaking a strategy? Is under-oaking a good idea, and if so, when and on what? So many questions.