This is great advice. Haven't found a spirit that was unredeemable (been at it 10 years professionally) by some sort of blending. Even something like astringency can change. I had a couple barrels of 16 year old bourbon that were really astringent when I got them, but a couple of years later when they were 18 some of that dropped off and they were great for blending into some 12 and 14 year bourbon. I was working with some American single malt that I put into 70 year old sherry casks and after a few months were talking on some great character from the barrels. A couple months later, the profile changed and the whiskey was bitter and astringent. A few months later, a deep, rich chocolate flavor came through, the mouthfeel was creamy and that spirit ended up winning double gold at San Francisco Spirits Comp. Often times, the right thing to do is wait a little longer. What really changed blending for me was taking ADI's blending and maturation course hosted by Nancy Farley in Texas. Learning from a pro like her changed my blending skills and knowledge for the better.
Great video! I've been setting up a solera rum and getting nervous I could over age, or just lose the quantity. Now you've given me a goods heads up on what I'm looking for. Thanks man
Jesse, very important video. Thanks for putting that together. I would like to add some thoughts. I have been doing the "craft" for 16 years and have found that three components combine to make the whiskey. 1) The grain bill, which, for me, dictates the aging process. Corn is far different than barley or wheat or rye, etc.. My aging process begins with that grain bill/recipe. 2) Still type. Pot versus reflux vs plated. I prefer pot. But each type affects the spirit in the aging, in my opinion. And 3) The wood. NEVER USE FINISHED OAK!!!! Always use good American White Oak that has been "aged" for years. I get my oak from a mill that has lots of scrap. I prefer the outer wood rather than the inner prime furniture grade. And, NEVER USE RAW, UNCHARRED OR UNROASTED OAK. Raw oak leaves a flavor that can never age out. I always char or roast/char. This is just my opinion, but I make pretty dang good whiskey.
Really informative video. I have a Badmotivator Legacy Barrel. Ex Sherry bourbon cask to be exact. Plan is to put some new make cask strength single malt spirit in it and let it sit for 5 years. In a broad sense do you think that's too long for an ex sherry cask?
Hey Jesse longtime fan and owner of an airstill pro. I have a video suggestion regarding that piece of equipment: testing different packing material and compare the quality/proof of the resulting product versus the original packing provided with the unit. Thanks for your great content.
When i was 18 someone gave me one of those over sized johnny walker bottles I wasn't a fan but i had an empty port barrel i emptied the bottle into the barrel stuck it on a shelf and forgot about it for 15 years or so it was really nice. nobody believed me that it was originally johnny walker red
Thanks Jessie Clear as mud now😜 This is one thing I really struggle with. I have a Banana Rum that's been on oak in glass for 18 moths now and I thought it was going good but now I have weird aromas and flavours showing up. I almost redistilled it a couple of times and have thought about removing and replacing the oak with fresh stuff but after watching this video I think I may have to give it some more time.
I was thinking about doing something similar to when you distilled the rice have you ever tried putting it in Oak? And would it just be a way still a good product?
I know that Oak is what is traditionally used for whiskey, have you used any other types for aging? I have seen some videos using used barrels but havent seen anything using other types of wood.
Hey , Great topic Jesse 👍 I have a Malt, Corn and Honey "whisky" in an 8 liter second use barrel, going on 15 months. Damn its hard to decide when to bottle it. Its good now ,,,,,, but will it get even more mellow and sweet oaked in 6 months ???? Cheers everybody 🍻🍹🍸
Like Jim McEvan used to say........... " a Barrel works like an Lung!". When it's getting warmer The wood of the staves expands and the filling penetrates into the wood. When it gets colder, the staves contract and press the filling and absorbed aromas back into the barrel. That Process takes it's time! That's why i'm not friend of fast aging!😎
Hi jesse love your work. been watching your videos for a month now since i dived in the Gin world. i was curious as if you can make a video about compound gin and maybe a recipe and some gidelines since here in italy is illegal to distill. i've experimented a bit but i would like to hear about it from the expert.
Here's an unrelated question, but I hoped to see if I can get an answer. I need some HIGH proof alcohol for a project and am going to re-distill some store bought vodka. I have a water distiller that I use for small jobs and can usually get 90 percent out of it, on the high side. I am putting in (3) 750ml bottles of 40 percent, so 2250ml. How much do you think I would get at 90, about a liter, which is what I kind of calculated out? Should I throw a fourth bottle in to be sure? I need to be as high as possible (at least 90) and need at least a liter.
Got a weird question about aging: Does it have to be oak? Is aging on other type of wood viable, and if so what have you tried? would you be open to trying other types of wood (cherry, apple, or some other fruit for a more brandy-type distillation, as an example)
I think it's worth touching onbthe oxidation effects of aging. Especially in glass jars with oak in them. Some people will say when you open a bottle, it goes bad in a few months due to the oxidation. If you open jars to test, are you over oxidizing if you go months or years after?
If it's new make, just redistill it. But yes, I've had great results putting mediocre whiskey into used wine and beer barrels. Port casks are my favorite. Have to be careful though, because garbage in usually equals garbage out.
Completely unrelated, after distilling there is alcohol left in the wash, is this drinkable? Is there anything else that can be done with it or should it just be thrown away? P s living in uk so the air still is all I have to work with
Jessie, you got me thinking about something...barrel ageing proofing water...imagine, you collect Sweetwater every time, when you have enough to fill a barrel transfer it and let it sit year or two. Will you be intetested in making this experiment? Cheers.
I have a question that doesn’t necessarily have to do with the video but is related to the topic of aging. So where I’m from we’ll distill a high percentage spirit akin to moonshine and then bottle it up with fruit to infuse it. I was wondering if after you strain the fruit out could you then age the liquor in a barrel? Has anyone tried it? Does infused alcohol not age well?
Tricky - I currently have a load of oak chips from wine kits that a use for Rum - I get my result in 10-14 days Still not got around to trying by Bad Motivator barrel as I'm ok with what I have just now
This is where I'm stuck as well. I'd say my spirit is still a little sharp however I'm unsure if the oak staves will do anything about it with time unlike a barrel.
Love Child Barrell fix?!?! It seems you may have Dimethyl Trisulfide, causing the cooked cabbage flavor. This usually is from not enough copper contact before it passes reflux or thumper and goes to condensor. You could try a test with a sample with copper added to it. It should covert the Dimethyl Trisulfide to a salt that will settle in the bottom of the jar. If this works, I can provide more ideas on how to fix barrell.
I was at Wyoming Whiskey and they also said they only bottle in the warmer months. They said the whiskey goes to sleep in the cold and they catch it as it wakes back up.
The trick is to only fill second or 3rd or re fill casks and there is no such thing as it aging too long in that case , it ready either when you like it or when the strenth is dropping / the losses are too high. I was processing 40yo whisky at work on Thursday and it wasnt over oaked. The trap people fall into is filling Virgin oak casks. I have spirit that i use to de virgin cask and take that harsh flavour out.
Great idea, except for spirits like bourbon which are required to go into virgin oak. But you can also transfer from virgin barrels into other barrels after aging a few years.
@@BeerMeetsWorldyes , maybe only full size casks work for bourbon in that the wood to spirit ratio allows for proper time in the cask. Time in the cask matters the most because otherwise you just end up with woody new make.
I start bottling when I actually have made enough that I have some to drink on while some is aging. Most of the time I can't seem to age past a week or 3 as thirsty as I get...😁
when the alcohol content drops and the taste becomes so astringent, has anyone tried adding high proof neutral spirit to potentially resolve the issue?
I’d assume wood chips in a jar have a whole different thing going on because there’s no air transfer like a wood barrel or half wood vessel! The spirit gets pulled in and out of a barrel making all kind of shit happen over time
For anyone confused about what astringent is.. Get a pecan in the shell. Open it and take out the flat woody part in between the nutmeat halves. Pop it in your mouth and chew. Congratulations! You now know exactly what astringent/tannic is! 😁
Meme Spirits Idea: Rutabaga Moonshine. I just came across an idea from a gaming youtiber I watch (Pravus) who had mentioned in a rrcent video about "Rutabaga Moonshine" and thoight it must taste terrible. I wonder if in your meme spirits series you could TRY that... and ser if you can make it tadte NOT terrible, lol.
So just a quick story on the topic. I made a batch of what you may call whiskey or sugar hootch haha anyways the grain i used was a grower ration for pigs since i had lots for my pigs and white sugar. The fermentation went great and distillation also went well. It was very strong on the alcohol side but tasted frigging awful but also got ya drunk, after having drank a few litres of this stuff that we ended up calling hog wild haha i found out that the protein source in the pig feed was dried and pelletized fish........ ya i know gnarly. Anyways that explains at least part of the cra,y taste but a buddy still has a jar of it with a peice of charred oak in the jar and its about 8 yrlears old now and it is absolutely jet fuel , completely undrinkable its so fucking strong it just burns the hell out of your stomach. Haha anyway thats the story of my hogwild moonshine
I have found that whether it's making beer, wine, or distilling woods fairy mysteries, it all requires the mystical insights of Ole Merlin... And as far as my mystical insights, my wife has more need for barrels surrounding her cooking vinagers from failed wines... Our peony flowers have become addicted to spoiled beers... And we have an abundance of high alcohol hand cleaner for the next false flag world plague... It is, what it is...
Watching as I do a stripping run on an all-grain 5-grain whiskey. Cheers! Also Jesse, you should do a collaboration with Robyn from This Blog's Neat. Her channel is small but she's the real deal (PhD, home distiller, all-around cool person).
When to stop ageing? Shit never really know, some brews age better than others Go ask a winemaker Drink a 10 year old wine/liquor, 25, 50, 75, 100 years old of quality Some drunk guy got a few of those bottles lying around..... Might be for sale if you pay good and it's still drinkable
I usually preform a seance to see when the Spirits are done aging.
Looks like the best way, buy a nice crystal ball and practice. 🤣
I just drink the shit cuz... When the demon shows up? I've done a good job! chasethecraftmassive hard
Thank you Jesse for the kind words. It’s all about finding the sweet spot. And if not. Using blending skills to find a cool middle ground.
This is great advice. Haven't found a spirit that was unredeemable (been at it 10 years professionally) by some sort of blending. Even something like astringency can change. I had a couple barrels of 16 year old bourbon that were really astringent when I got them, but a couple of years later when they were 18 some of that dropped off and they were great for blending into some 12 and 14 year bourbon.
I was working with some American single malt that I put into 70 year old sherry casks and after a few months were talking on some great character from the barrels. A couple months later, the profile changed and the whiskey was bitter and astringent. A few months later, a deep, rich chocolate flavor came through, the mouthfeel was creamy and that spirit ended up winning double gold at San Francisco Spirits Comp. Often times, the right thing to do is wait a little longer.
What really changed blending for me was taking ADI's blending and maturation course hosted by Nancy Farley in Texas. Learning from a pro like her changed my blending skills and knowledge for the better.
(United States of America) Federal judge rules that 156-year-old ban on at-home distilling is unconstitutional
My question is do you have to be apart of the club for this ruling to apply. This has been the situation in some court cases.
@@manicmedic6409 That's the way I read it but it opens the door. 😉🥃
not necessarily that simple.
Sux to the law!!
Freedom first
DOJ has filed an appeal on that decision, and now we will have to wait to see what the 5th Circuit Court says.
omg... the audio... the sound stage is amazing.
Thanks man, I really appreciate these explainer videos 👍
Great video!
I've been setting up a solera rum and getting nervous I could over age, or just lose the quantity. Now you've given me a goods heads up on what I'm looking for. Thanks man
I've got a 10 litre barrel ,been ageing for four months,it's bloody gorgeous.!!
Jesse, very important video. Thanks for putting that together. I would like to add some thoughts. I have been doing the "craft" for 16 years and have found that three components combine to make the whiskey. 1) The grain bill, which, for me, dictates the aging process. Corn is far different than barley or wheat or rye, etc.. My aging process begins with that grain bill/recipe. 2) Still type. Pot versus reflux vs plated. I prefer pot. But each type affects the spirit in the aging, in my opinion. And 3) The wood. NEVER USE FINISHED OAK!!!! Always use good American White Oak that has been "aged" for years. I get my oak from a mill that has lots of scrap. I prefer the outer wood rather than the inner prime furniture grade. And, NEVER USE RAW, UNCHARRED OR UNROASTED OAK. Raw oak leaves a flavor that can never age out. I always char or roast/char.
This is just my opinion, but I make pretty dang good whiskey.
Yup. That raw resin flavour of uncooked oak is so overpowering, and never goes away. Makes yer teeth curl!
This is my biggest question in this hobby
Really informative video. I have a Badmotivator Legacy Barrel. Ex Sherry bourbon cask to be exact. Plan is to put some new make cask strength single malt spirit in it and let it sit for 5 years. In a broad sense do you think that's too long for an ex sherry cask?
Hey Jesse longtime fan and owner of an airstill pro. I have a video suggestion regarding that piece of equipment: testing different packing material and compare the quality/proof of the resulting product versus the original packing provided with the unit. Thanks for your great content.
What a great place to be, where I'm really happy, to get some input on this 🙂👍🏼
When i was 18 someone gave me one of those over sized johnny walker bottles I wasn't a fan but i had an empty port barrel i emptied the bottle into the barrel stuck it on a shelf and forgot about it for 15 years or so it was really nice.
nobody believed me that it was originally johnny walker red
I have a bottle of OGBiB that's been aging on oak like 10 years now... pretty impressive where it got just by forgetting about it.
Thanks Jessie
Clear as mud now😜
This is one thing I really struggle with.
I have a Banana Rum that's been on oak in glass for 18 moths now and I thought it was going good but now I have weird aromas and flavours showing up. I almost redistilled it a couple of times and have thought about removing and replacing the oak with fresh stuff but after watching this video I think I may have to give it some more time.
Another great video! OK, now that I've over-oaked my shine what can I do?
DYI Fermentation vessles is a good video to do next.
I had to do research on 5 gallon buckets and 55-gallon (208 liters) drums and garbage cans.
Hiya,
Been watching your videos for a couple of years ………
I have a question, but would like to ask it directly, is that possible ?
Just barrel aged my imperial stout in barrel for a month and it's gotten a hint of vanilla and smokiness that I adore
On another note I am currently planning to get a Badmo Barrel for my barleywines to add some more depth
Sounds amazing. Definitely on my bucket list
I was thinking about doing something similar to when you distilled the rice have you ever tried putting it in Oak? And would it just be a way still a good product?
I know that Oak is what is traditionally used for whiskey, have you used any other types for aging? I have seen some videos using used barrels but havent seen anything using other types of wood.
Good video. It's easy to put in far too much charred oak. It probably doesn't take as much as you think. "Over-oaked" is a thing.
Hey , Great topic Jesse 👍 I have a Malt, Corn and Honey "whisky" in an 8 liter second use barrel, going on 15 months. Damn its hard to decide when to bottle it. Its good now ,,,,,, but will it get even more mellow and sweet oaked in 6 months ???? Cheers everybody 🍻🍹🍸
Like Jim McEvan used to say........... " a Barrel works like an Lung!". When it's getting warmer The wood of the staves expands and the filling penetrates into the wood. When it gets colder, the staves contract and press the filling and absorbed aromas back into the barrel. That Process takes it's time! That's why i'm not friend of fast aging!😎
Dang, and here I was about to look for your most recent vid and lo and behold, here it is!
Hi jesse love your work. been watching your videos for a month now since i dived in the Gin world. i was curious as if you can make a video about compound gin and maybe a recipe and some gidelines since here in italy is illegal to distill. i've experimented a bit but i would like to hear about it from the expert.
Is that badmo barrel in the opening split?? Like the steel can on the upper left side?
Jesse did you ever try those oak barrel heads that can be put on mason jars? I'm thinking about giving them a try
Any tips on what containers to use for aging? The forums don’t offer a whole lot of clarity.
Here's an unrelated question, but I hoped to see if I can get an answer. I need some HIGH proof alcohol for a project and am going to re-distill some store bought vodka. I have a water distiller that I use for small jobs and can usually get 90 percent out of it, on the high side. I am putting in (3) 750ml bottles of 40 percent, so 2250ml. How much do you think I would get at 90, about a liter, which is what I kind of calculated out? Should I throw a fourth bottle in to be sure? I need to be as high as possible (at least 90) and need at least a liter.
Got a weird question about aging: Does it have to be oak? Is aging on other type of wood viable, and if so what have you tried? would you be open to trying other types of wood (cherry, apple, or some other fruit for a more brandy-type distillation, as an example)
How often do you check and assess your spirits?
I understand and I thank you.
I think it's worth touching onbthe oxidation effects of aging. Especially in glass jars with oak in them. Some people will say when you open a bottle, it goes bad in a few months due to the oxidation. If you open jars to test, are you over oxidizing if you go months or years after?
Super helpful thank you 🍻
Question is could you monitor the barrel and add a strong neutral 140 proof to bring the abv up if the barrel starts to dropp sub 90 proof?
Can you fix an off batch by finishing with used wine, beer or rum barrels?
If it's new make, just redistill it. But yes, I've had great results putting mediocre whiskey into used wine and beer barrels. Port casks are my favorite. Have to be careful though, because garbage in usually equals garbage out.
Completely unrelated, after distilling there is alcohol left in the wash, is this drinkable? Is there anything else that can be done with it or should it just be thrown away? P s living in uk so the air still is all I have to work with
I can tell how new your videos are by how long your beard is.... You create great videos. Thank you very much. Actually like the beard.
Jessie, you got me thinking about something...barrel ageing proofing water...imagine, you collect Sweetwater every time, when you have enough to fill a barrel transfer it and let it sit year or two. Will you be intetested in making this experiment?
Cheers.
I have a question that doesn’t necessarily have to do with the video but is related to the topic of aging. So where I’m from we’ll distill a high percentage spirit akin to moonshine and then bottle it up with fruit to infuse it. I was wondering if after you strain the fruit out could you then age the liquor in a barrel? Has anyone tried it? Does infused alcohol not age well?
When I’m long aging I put a little of the fiery heads in and age til the burn has mellowed
Tricky - I currently have a load of oak chips from wine kits that a use for Rum - I get my result in 10-14 days Still not got around to trying by Bad Motivator barrel as I'm ok with what I have just now
Trying to watch this vid and all I can think is "god damn thats a magnificent beard" much love and respect from ballarat brother
ah the eternal question
"When do you pull it out"
This is where I'm stuck as well. I'd say my spirit is still a little sharp however I'm unsure if the oak staves will do anything about it with time unlike a barrel.
Love Child Barrell fix?!?! It seems you may have Dimethyl Trisulfide, causing the cooked cabbage flavor. This usually is from not enough copper contact before it passes reflux or thumper and goes to condensor. You could try a test with a sample with copper added to it. It should covert the Dimethyl Trisulfide to a salt that will settle in the bottom of the jar. If this works, I can provide more ideas on how to fix barrell.
have you ever done a blue agave syrup based spirit yet.
Rotate the barrel?
Talking about aging how’s the love child barrel beside you going.
I was at Wyoming Whiskey and they also said they only bottle in the warmer months. They said the whiskey goes to sleep in the cold and they catch it as it wakes back up.
The trick is to only fill second or 3rd or re fill casks and there is no such thing as it aging too long in that case , it ready either when you like it or when the strenth is dropping / the losses are too high. I was processing 40yo whisky at work on Thursday and it wasnt over oaked. The trap people fall into is filling Virgin oak casks. I have spirit that i use to de virgin cask and take that harsh flavour out.
Great idea, except for spirits like bourbon which are required to go into virgin oak. But you can also transfer from virgin barrels into other barrels after aging a few years.
@@BeerMeetsWorldyes , maybe only full size casks work for bourbon in that the wood to spirit ratio allows for proper time in the cask. Time in the cask matters the most because otherwise you just end up with woody new make.
Has anyone got any ideas of getting rid of kinda soapy taste?
I start bottling when I actually have made enough that I have some to drink on while some is aging. Most of the time I can't seem to age past a week or 3 as thirsty as I get...😁
Dang it.... I just been going by taste.
🙂
when the alcohol content drops and the taste becomes so astringent, has anyone tried adding high proof neutral spirit to potentially resolve the issue?
I’d assume wood chips in a jar have a whole different thing going on because there’s no air transfer like a wood barrel or half wood vessel! The spirit gets pulled in and out of a barrel making all kind of shit happen over time
For anyone confused about what astringent is.. Get a pecan in the shell. Open it and take out the flat woody part in between the nutmeat halves. Pop it in your mouth and chew.
Congratulations! You now know exactly what astringent/tannic is! 😁
Easy peasy: Pull it out when it's too woody. Once it's been in a bottle for a while it will mellow out.
You talking about liquor, right?
@@michaelanderson2166 Yes. And if you are going to mix them afterwards, then it's completely different, of course.
@@michaelanderson2166 also clicked on here to confirm he was talking about liquor 😂
He gives us tips stock market investing o.o
When your previous batch runs out................
Meme Spirits Idea: Rutabaga Moonshine.
I just came across an idea from a gaming youtiber I watch (Pravus) who had mentioned in a rrcent video about "Rutabaga Moonshine" and thoight it must taste terrible.
I wonder if in your meme spirits series you could TRY that... and ser if you can make it tadte NOT terrible, lol.
So just a quick story on the topic. I made a batch of what you may call whiskey or sugar hootch haha anyways the grain i used was a grower ration for pigs since i had lots for my pigs and white sugar. The fermentation went great and distillation also went well. It was very strong on the alcohol side but tasted frigging awful but also got ya drunk, after having drank a few litres of this stuff that we ended up calling hog wild haha i found out that the protein source in the pig feed was dried and pelletized fish........ ya i know gnarly. Anyways that explains at least part of the cra,y taste but a buddy still has a jar of it with a peice of charred oak in the jar and its about 8 yrlears old now and it is absolutely jet fuel , completely undrinkable its so fucking strong it just burns the hell out of your stomach. Haha anyway thats the story of my hogwild moonshine
I have found that whether it's making beer, wine, or distilling woods fairy mysteries, it all requires the mystical insights of Ole Merlin... And as far as my mystical insights, my wife has more need for barrels surrounding her cooking vinagers from failed wines... Our peony flowers have become addicted to spoiled beers... And we have an abundance of high alcohol hand cleaner for the next false flag world plague... It is, what it is...
I read the title as "when to start drinking spirits"
When to stop aging? The second it comes out of the condenser, especially with fruit brandies....Schnapps 😅
Watching as I do a stripping run on an all-grain 5-grain whiskey. Cheers! Also Jesse, you should do a collaboration with Robyn from This Blog's Neat. Her channel is small but she's the real deal (PhD, home distiller, all-around cool person).
When to stop ageing?
Shit never really know, some brews age better than others
Go ask a winemaker
Drink a 10 year old wine/liquor, 25, 50, 75, 100 years old of quality
Some drunk guy got a few of those bottles lying around..... Might be for sale if you pay good and it's still drinkable
Your liquor will change AFTER bottling... Heaps
does all your thumbnail pics have to include a exaggerated facial expression?
I strongly disagree that generally aging is better, think of a fresh fruitty spirit the last thing you want to do with that is age it.