- Joined
- Apr 27, 2020
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I understand that oaking a wine and how much is more on preference than anything. I'm currently aging a Chilean Malbec that has had French Oak heavy toast sticks in for two months and I will rack again next weekend, then bottle sometime after that.
I'm then going to start a Shiraz and then shortly after that another batch of Rhubarb wine. I've purchased both french medium plus sticks for the Shiraz and American oak medium sticks that I'm thinking about using in the Rhubarb. These wines will be in the carboy's aging for much longer. Possibly as much as a year.
Questions:
a). Is there any wine that you would NOT age with oak?
b). Does anyone have experience with oaking a country wine like Rhubarb?
Since I am so new to wine making and really have never oaked a wine before other than my current Malbec that I haven't tasted since I added the sticks, I'm really in the dark as to how long one should have the sticks in the wine. When I think about commercial wineries, they age their wines in oak barrels for a very long time. (years sometimes). I would also think that a new oak barrel would add way more oak flavor and aroma than sticks.
So, is there a fear of oaking too much with these wines?
Thanks,
I'm then going to start a Shiraz and then shortly after that another batch of Rhubarb wine. I've purchased both french medium plus sticks for the Shiraz and American oak medium sticks that I'm thinking about using in the Rhubarb. These wines will be in the carboy's aging for much longer. Possibly as much as a year.
Questions:
a). Is there any wine that you would NOT age with oak?
b). Does anyone have experience with oaking a country wine like Rhubarb?
Since I am so new to wine making and really have never oaked a wine before other than my current Malbec that I haven't tasted since I added the sticks, I'm really in the dark as to how long one should have the sticks in the wine. When I think about commercial wineries, they age their wines in oak barrels for a very long time. (years sometimes). I would also think that a new oak barrel would add way more oak flavor and aroma than sticks.
So, is there a fear of oaking too much with these wines?
Thanks,