Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes.

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Jim
 
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Default Oak addition

How much French oak should you add to 23 Liters of red and white wine?
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Steve Waller
 
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Jim:

This is gonna sound kinda dumb but.....

AS MUCH AS **YOU** LIKE !!!!

Personally, I don't put oak in white wines, but then I'm not a fan of
Chardonnay (the white that is most usually oaked).

I don't really like heavily oaked reds (although my tastes are always
changing)., so I would stick to 25-50 grams. If you LOVE the
Australian reds, you will probably want to go higher, say 100grams.

Don't forget, you can add oak dust, chips, or cubes to the primary.
Chips or cubes to the secondary. Or add liquid oak prior to bottling.

I know somebody who is an OAK FANATIC. He has been known to add
liquid oak to the bottle, carafe, or even glass.

Steve

On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 05:35:19 GMT, Jim > wrote:

>How much French oak should you add to 23 Liters of red and white wine?


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Joe Sallustio
 
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I would use 150 g of chips or beans in the red and around 30 in the
white but I like oak; baybe start with half that and taste in a few
days. If using the dust cut all of that by a factor of 5 and start at
a factor of 10.

Joe

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Joe Sallustio
 
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Default Oak addition

I would use 150 g of chips or beans in the red and around 30 in the
white but I like oak; baybe start with half that and taste in a few
days. If using the dust cut all of that by a factor of 5 and start at
a factor of 10.

Joe

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JEP62
 
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Oak also fades over time. That wine that tastes over oaked in the
carboy could have very little oak character left after a couple years
of bottle age.

Andy



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Jim
 
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Default Oak addition

On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 05:35:19 GMT, Jim > wrote:

>How much French oak should you add to 23 Liters of red and white wine?



Thank you one and all for the information and have a merry Christmas.
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