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Re: [OM] IMG: Airport Observations

Subject: Re: [OM] IMG: Airport Observations
From: Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2015 16:09:15 -0500
Thanks, Moose. From your comments, and those of others, I have more respect for the common whiskey barrel. My Dad had a problem with alcohol, so I don't imbibe, which puts me at a disadvantage in these discussions. But, I reside between the two most well known distilleries in Tennessee, so I should be better informed. Speaking of stills, I found what appeared to be remnants of a still in a "hollow" near the back line of our farm in Mississippi, back when I was a kid. My wife and I used to joke about the sources of whiffs of smoke over the Bear Creek backwoods in North Alabama, as we flew over on our journeys back to Mississippi. But, I kept my distance.

Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA

On 4/27/2015 3:50 PM, Moose wrote:
On 4/27/2015 1:17 PM, Paul Braun wrote:
Quite a few of them find their way to the Caribbean and are used for aging
tequila and rum as well.

Interesting how complex a tiny area of knowledge can be.

They are also used to produce Canadian Whiskies and by a few micro breweries, to age beer.

I had a great uncle who had a career as a 'revenooer', a Federal agent searching out and destroying stills and prosecuting their operators.

He told us that the flavoring effect of the barrel was determined by whether it was newly charred or used, the surface area of the charred portion relative to the volume and the time in the barrel. To get the expected flavor profile of a five year aged Kentucky Bourbon, you have to start with a new, freshly charred barrel of a certain size.

OR, you can use any sort of container, put in a lot of charred wood chips and your fresh moonshine, set it on a rocker powered by a car battery and leave it to age a few weeks out in the woods. Huge surface area of fresh char and gentle agitation apparently equals several years lying still aging in barrels.

He told many tales, including the one of the ersatz Canadian Club that was so good, and pervasive in the South, that they had to send samples to the SF office for analysis, to be reasonably sure it was being compared to the real thing.

Used barrels are particularly suitable for making mild whiskies or for Whisky that gets it's flavor elsewhere, as from drying the barley with peat fires. (Extra credit for knowing the difference between the way this is done for Irish and Scotch Whisky.)

Unless my memory is playing down, I believe I had a winery tour many years in the Napa Valley where they used really well used ex-whiskey barrels for aging some of their wine. Apparently even after they can't be used to make even very mild whiskey, the barrels may live on before becoming planters.

Whiskery Moose


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