Kitchen
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2020
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I got my hands on an 8 gallon new oak barrel with a medium toast and plan on first aging a full bodied right bank Bordeaux blend, followed by a Petite Sirah & Malbec blend I plan on fortifying and sweetening to turn it into a tawny. This is the first time I used a barrel and have a few questions on using it.
First, I am just wondering how long I should plan on aging here given the smaller size of the barrel. I realize the tawny is going to have to go for the long haul, but how long should I plan on aging the Bordeaux? I was thinking 4 or 5 months?
Also, my idea behind aging the Bordeaux first was to strip a good portion of the oak flavor out of the barrel so the tawny does not get over oaked with 3 to 5 years of aging. Does this make sense and is one wine good enough to remove the amount of oak needed to prevent over oaking on the tawny?
By the time the tawny gets into the barrel, the fine lees will be long racked off. Should I be concerned about over oxidation of a fortified wine without any lees in the barrel?
Thanks in advance.
First, I am just wondering how long I should plan on aging here given the smaller size of the barrel. I realize the tawny is going to have to go for the long haul, but how long should I plan on aging the Bordeaux? I was thinking 4 or 5 months?
Also, my idea behind aging the Bordeaux first was to strip a good portion of the oak flavor out of the barrel so the tawny does not get over oaked with 3 to 5 years of aging. Does this make sense and is one wine good enough to remove the amount of oak needed to prevent over oaking on the tawny?
By the time the tawny gets into the barrel, the fine lees will be long racked off. Should I be concerned about over oxidation of a fortified wine without any lees in the barrel?
Thanks in advance.