Hey everyone,
I have a flanders red going on around 9 months right now, and a lambic type I started a few weeks ago. I'm thinking that I might add some oak to them, probably cubes. Dumb question though, how does this physically work? They're in carboys, so I can drop them in one at a time, but what if I want to get them out if the flavour gets too much? Or should I just wait until the beer is more or less done, add the oak until I think it's added enough, and then bottle it? What do you all do?
Andrew
oaking sour beers
- amartin
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- darciandjenn
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Re: oaking sour beers
Could you suspend them in a mesh bag or something with some unflavoured floss so you can fish them out later?
- LiverDance
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Re: oaking sour beers
You could transfer carboys once you reached the flavor you want. Not sure how long you are going to age them but you could also use half of the oak you want and then decide if you want more just before bottling.
"Twenty years ago — a time, by the way, that hops such as Simcoe and Citra were already being developed, but weren’t about to find immediate popularity — there wasn’t a brewer on earth who would have gone to the annual Hop Growers of American convention and said, “I’m going to have a beer that we make 4,000 barrels of, one time a year. It flies off the shelf at damn near $20 a six-pack, and you know what it smells like? It smells like your cat ate your weed and then pissed in the Christmas tree.” - Bell’s Brewery Director of Operations John Mallet on the scent of their popular Hopslam.
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