SilentAutumn
Well-Known Member
I'll admit it. I like the novelty of a 5 gallon oak cask. But from what I've read, new ones are too oaky and will overpower a beer.
Anyone ever try filling the cask with some rot gut to "age" the cask for a while and lessen the oak bite? I'd like to do it with whiskey for undertones but it becomes prohibitive:
1) What am I going to do with 5 gallons of rot gut whiskey after it's sat in the oak cask?
2) Even rot gut becomes expensive when you're looking at buying 5 gallons.
I've thought about maybe scorching the inside of the cask with a torch, dumping one gallon of whiskey in it, and just swirl it every day while changing the resting position of the cask it self. That way the stout/porter would pick up oak, smoke, and whiskey.
(I've thought about using Merlot and doing a barleywine, but I don't know how I could compensate for the angels share on a new 5 gallon batch.)
Anyone ever try filling the cask with some rot gut to "age" the cask for a while and lessen the oak bite? I'd like to do it with whiskey for undertones but it becomes prohibitive:
1) What am I going to do with 5 gallons of rot gut whiskey after it's sat in the oak cask?
2) Even rot gut becomes expensive when you're looking at buying 5 gallons.
I've thought about maybe scorching the inside of the cask with a torch, dumping one gallon of whiskey in it, and just swirl it every day while changing the resting position of the cask it self. That way the stout/porter would pick up oak, smoke, and whiskey.
(I've thought about using Merlot and doing a barleywine, but I don't know how I could compensate for the angels share on a new 5 gallon batch.)