Got a link to that man? Don't believe I've read that onemanticle said:I would call it oaking rather than aging but yes.
Works great with brett beers. Any other beer - make sure you go the whole hog on steaming and toasting those chips. I'd like to try Tony's method of adding to the no chill cube.
How long would you "age" the beer for - say with 1g per litre as you suggest?Danscraftbeer said:I've added them to kegs. Works nice at around 1g per litre. I have baked them in foil in the oven and in to keg in a hop bag. Or for this Smokey Oak Stout I made I put the bag of chips into a 200ml canning jar with 1/2 water and 1/2 Jack Daniels. Pressure cooked it and cooled it and added all to the kegged beer. Somewhat simulating being stored in a whisky barrel. That worked really well. It was a subtle background flavour.
agreebarls said:although i find chips are a bit one dimensional in flavour and over oak really quickly.
the bigger the piece the more rounded the flavour and the longer the exposure time can be.
These are very nice bits of oak compared to the chips that are more readily available. I am using some French oak dominos in a Shiraz that I am making, the smell amazing out of the bag. The good thing too is you can leave them in for long periods without getting the unpleasant flavours that leech out very quickly from chips.Cortez The Killer said:I've had a lot of success with oak dominoes from http://www.stilldragon.com.au/oak-dominoes/
The IBU's had an oak based brew comp that was a lot of fun.
I've added them to secondary and straight to the keg - beers end up delicious.
No good in the primary as the yeast will coat them and limit extraction.
From my understanding the cut of the domino reduces the amount of end grain as compared to chips or cubes thereby reducing harshness etc.
My usual dosage is 2 - 4 dominoes per 20L. From memory each one weighs 30-50g. Most of the time I don't bother taking them out of the keg so the beer takes on more oak as time goes on.
I can't say that I would regard anything I've used them in as being over oaked though.
If anyone got a Hungarian oak domino bulk buy up I'd be in on that after sampling Barl's beers
Cheers
I slow carbonated it in the kegerater with the bag of whisky oak chips for at least a week then taste tested it over maybe a month. When it became really impressive in blended flavour I bottled the entire keg and left in the garage fridge and enjoyed it here and there over a few months to a year. After aging in bottles it did mellow on the flavors including the Whisky Oak character. I also put some in the cupboard to let sit at room temperature to see if it gets better or worse. It didn't get worse. It was all good to the very last.Xander said:How long would you "age" the beer for - say with 1g per litre as you suggest?
This is for an Imperial Coffee Stout...
Cheers.
I'm good for oak but i still have the contact details of the company i bought through.Cortez The Killer said:If anyone got a Hungarian oak domino bulk buy up I'd be in on that after sampling Barl's beers
Cheers