Crazy Techniques They Use to Produce Giant Wine Barrels

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2024

Комментарии • 197

  • @tedhardulak7698
    @tedhardulak7698 Год назад +42

    Thank you for not having background music on this great video. Most are doing it now and it is really taking from the content. GREAT!!!

    • @shackledcitizen
      @shackledcitizen Год назад +5

      I so agree and have complained about music drowning out dialogue, many times.

  • @unclerojelio6320
    @unclerojelio6320 Год назад +27

    I’ve always found it interesting the number and use of barrels aboard square rigged sailing ships back in the age of sail. Everything in the ships hold was stored in barrels, including stave and hoops for making even more barrels. The ship’s cooper was constantly either knocking up or tearing down barrels. Fascinating stuff.

    • @davewebster5120
      @davewebster5120 Год назад +4

      It's a tough profession I've recently gained a lot of respect for. That used to be a major occupation! Crazy how the times change (just not for the wine or whiskey industry).

    • @senianns9522
      @senianns9522 Год назад +2

      Even drinking out of them! Cheers!

  • @chuckaddison5134
    @chuckaddison5134 Год назад +24

    An explaination of what is happening at each step, and how it's important to the barrel would be helpful. Some are obivious, others not so much.

  • @cardinalblack5964
    @cardinalblack5964 Год назад +7

    Magnificent! Can't get over the mix of automation & handcraftship.

  • @fern6114
    @fern6114 Год назад +3

    J’aurai encore put regarder des heures, chapeau et aussi chapeau pour les vieux tonneliers, merci

  • @bogey19018
    @bogey19018 Год назад +2

    This is an art that I hope never dies.

  • @HWPcville
    @HWPcville Год назад +24

    I'm sure they have worked out the most efficient way to construct a barrel. But there sure is a lot of installing and removing the hoops. Just when I think surely this has to be the final fitting they get knocked off with another round of processing and new bands pressed on. They sure look good and its impressive they don't leak, just held together by, you guessed it, more hoops. LOL.

    • @therealxunil2
      @therealxunil2 Год назад +1

      Don’t anger the hoop mafia !!

    • @perstaffanlundgren
      @perstaffanlundgren Год назад +3

      After steam heating the wood must be allowed to cool of properly , otherwise it will spring back. They cut the groves for the bottom and top and install them afterwards,so the hoops has to go of to get these in to the grove.
      I think the removal and reinstalment of the hoops have something to do with coping with the wood drying an shrinking also.
      The general rule for oak steaming in boat building is one hour per 25 mm 1 "
      The baking time may vary depending on steam temp ....
      Oak is very nice to heat form (keeping it's new form very good )

    • @cardinalblack5964
      @cardinalblack5964 Год назад

      ​​@@perstaffanlundgren thank you for the technical insight. Knew there was a reason they don't appear to rush the job with full-on automation, just couldn't put my hand on it.

    • @SuperPhexx
      @SuperPhexx Год назад +1

      There are more efficient/modern methods of making barrels than shown in the video.
      There are several videos on RUclips showing different methods

    • @leonperry123
      @leonperry123 Год назад

      The band's hold it together while it's been made. There's no nails in this job.

  • @gregparrott
    @gregparrott Год назад +17

    In 1986, I toured two of France's top vineyards, Chateau Pétrus and Chateau Cheval Blanc. At one of them (forget which now), I saw two men HAND CRAFTING barrels. They had none of the machinery shown here. They used hand held 'draw shave knives to taper the individual planks. Pretty friggin amazing that by hand, they could make them water tight. Purely by hand, they could produce two barrels per day.

    • @deadcxap755
      @deadcxap755 Год назад +7

      Actually, it's not that difficult. Wood, even oak, is a fairly soft material; if there are any fit flaws somewhere, they will shrink when putting on the hoops. Also, in traditional technology, special leaves are used, laid between the boards; they also provide a tight seal due to crumpling. And finally, the wood swells with liquid, so first the barrel is prepared - steamed, or filled with water for several weeks, which causes the wood to swell and close all the cracks.

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Год назад +2

      @@deadcxap755 Interesting. Thanks for the details

    • @adrianobueno6984
      @adrianobueno6984 Год назад

      Yes, and using a gun to apply modern sealant. Then it's easy to be leak proof. I'm a bit disappointed with them to be honest @@deadcxap755

    • @xx112233xxable
      @xx112233xxable Год назад +4

      My friend, you are way too dismissive! And I believe wrong on a few points. If you pay close attention the stave widths are not at all uniform but just as all else in nature, random. Within a range of course, but it is quite remarkable to me that even with the help of some pretty cool machines (that have been developed to do nothing else than build barrels by the way!) that each cooper is able to build several barrels each day. And each of those barrels are held together only by the very specific and uniform bevel angle of each and every stave combined with the enormous pressure exerted when the galvanized steel hoops are pounded down around them. Only the two round headboards ever get any `flagging` or the dried and flattened reed from the cattail plant, not leaves. You may have also noticed a flour/water mixture being spread like grout into the groove ( the croze) which the head fits into. But other than some flour puddy, some water plant reeds and an occasional wooden dowel pins to keep the head boards stable, but these barrels are held together by an ancient woodworking complement of the stave bevel cut versus its specific elliptical pattern. That is the only thing besides a whole lot of human sweat energy holdingthese barrels tight.
      It's also amazing to me that although not the same thing as the golden mean, there is an important mathematical relationship at the heart of using barrels in the liquor business. The internal surface area of the barrel which will dictate the power of the oak influence on the beverage contained is based on square centimeters, while the volume of the liquid in the barrel is measured in units of milliliters cubed. This has the effect of causing different sized barrels to have rather drastically different effects on aging. These large puncheons are roughly double the size of the typical barrique style wine barrel. Some winemakers use these puncheons along with the smaller sized barrels but they are used much more frequently in the the much longer aging regime of ports and whiskys (Scottish not American) and maybe even some brandies.
      Bottom line is it IS difficult and there are several factors that make this task Amazing to me. Granted, I have spent 40 years now trying to figure out how to use these things to try and make delicious beverages (mostly wine) and although I've developed a lot of opinions, I realize that I don't really know much and I'm constantly surprised and or humbled when I open up and taste something that has been aged in one of these amazing containers!

  • @RobertoLabrador-tm9ti
    @RobertoLabrador-tm9ti 6 месяцев назад

    Gracias por todas las técnicas y experiencia de este bello oficio que realizo

  • @lynettemayhew1723
    @lynettemayhew1723 Год назад +5

    Beautiful wine barrels. That is quite an involved process. I hope you all get paid well for your expertise. Thanks for sharing this process with us👌

  • @rodritchison1995
    @rodritchison1995 Год назад +1

    It's no wonder these valuable items are used over and over. Brilliant.

  • @GFSwinger1693
    @GFSwinger1693 Год назад

    THANK YOU for just the normal sounds of production and no annoying, non value adding music.

  • @richjurgens
    @richjurgens Год назад +2

    That is an amazing video. Those are some very talented and hard working people!

  • @andrewlm5677
    @andrewlm5677 Год назад +12

    Nice video! The toasting and charring is so interesting to me. The flavor impacts those variables can have are profound (and are rightly treated as trade secrets by the professionals)

  • @lawrencewillard6370
    @lawrencewillard6370 Год назад +7

    20+ years ago, made one small barrel. Getting the quarter sawn board to make into staves was the hardest. Did it, wasn't the best looking but I liked it. Watched some videos then where they used steel cables to draw it in. Interesting.

  • @bendenisereedy7865
    @bendenisereedy7865 Год назад +4

    Interesting insight into the start of the massive unseen triangular trade in barrels between Scotland, Spain & Portugal and Kentucky.
    Living in Scotland I've realised that apart from the Islay malts all whiskies are just water and ethanol coming off the still and don't get their colour and flavour until they're stored in the barrels.

    • @norbertschmitz3358
      @norbertschmitz3358 Год назад

      That's right.
      And the higher the ""Angels share""....the better and more valuable the all spirits become.
      Love to be an Angel🤣🤣🤣🤣
      Cheers
      from Germany

    • @toomaskotkas4467
      @toomaskotkas4467 11 месяцев назад

      I think that depending on the local water source used, the chemical composition will be slightly different.

  • @rjwh67220
    @rjwh67220 Год назад +6

    Fascinating. I’d like to see how barrels were made before power tools, when they were made completely by hand.

    • @stephendartnall8928
      @stephendartnall8928 Год назад

      Old feller in Yorkshire still makes all by hand, no machines at all, theres a vid of him on here somewhere under handmade barrels, and yes the dimensions,angles and curves are a well kept secret, the piece of paper in the vid with the sizes etc is pixelled out lol

  • @folkeholmberg3519
    @folkeholmberg3519 Год назад +2

    Millenia old technic in a new fashion craft, impressing as it's allways been, all in pure oak.
    It impresses me that nothing has changed in the skill itself.

  • @cassa5748
    @cassa5748 Год назад +2

    vraiment super de voir cela . du beau travail 👍👍

  • @TheMonkdad
    @TheMonkdad Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I’d love a more detailed explanation of how that machine mills the staves and how they fix leaks.

  • @YoureNowOnTV
    @YoureNowOnTV 11 месяцев назад

    That was a barrel of fun! 😁👍🛢

  • @BhaaskarDesai
    @BhaaskarDesai Год назад +3

    This manufacturing unit is 'Tonnellerie Billon' from France, since 1947 :)

  • @TheWelwyn21
    @TheWelwyn21 10 месяцев назад

    I enjoyed that and no poxy music in the background

  • @derrickworthington7351
    @derrickworthington7351 Год назад +3

    I once spent in the company of 4 other soldiers 6 hours in a wine cellar in the Moselle region. We were tasting wine straight from the 1000 litre barrels. Needless to say we weren’t sober when we left at 4 in the morning to go back too our tents. I do not recommend finding your way around tents in the dark having consumed so much wine. The hangover was impressive. As we five were all Senior NCOs the junior ranks made the most of our suffering. Great night though.

  • @marcorosa692
    @marcorosa692 Год назад +2

    Nice video... I'm passionate by tonnellerie. Regards from Curitiba - Brazil.

  • @tripbreaker
    @tripbreaker 10 месяцев назад +1

    In regards to the bunghole, is there a teepee for it? If so, who makes the teepee for the bunghole?

  • @donalfinn4205
    @donalfinn4205 Год назад +9

    Works of art. It was a very highly skilled job to do them by hand.☘️👍

  • @Mart77
    @Mart77 Год назад +1

    Main motto of that company : "if you're not taking apart of what previous guy built - then you're not doing it correctly"

  • @danerose575
    @danerose575 10 месяцев назад

    Its hard to imagine anyone putting a 10 hour day in making barrels asking themselves: "Does my life have any value? What's my purpose?" It's the gift of using our bodies to do hard, useful things that last.

  • @Geonious
    @Geonious Год назад +1

    6:02 Smooth move! 👍

  • @rickdunn7585
    @rickdunn7585 Год назад +1

    A fine art that has been taken to the next level 😊

  • @fivemega1
    @fivemega1 Год назад +17

    This was official job of my father long time ago and he used to do that almost alone, every part of it without high tech machinery. Most of demand was for bigger sizes about 5' diameter and 6~7' tall but once a while he had order for even larger or smaller sizes.
    Most of them was for use alcoholic beverages (mostly wine) and sometimes used for different purpose or even decoration and outdoor advertisement which does not need to be sealed and was much easier to make and cheaper. The sealed one was made of oak and others from different type of woods.
    I helped him couple of summer break when I was in high school and know theorycally how it was made but not enough knowledge how to actually make them.
    .

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Год назад

      I'm sure that with such mechanization, the skill to make them by hand is now a lost art. In 1986, I toured two of France's top vineyards, Chateau Pétrus and Chateau Cheval Blanc. At one of them (forget which), I saw two men HAND CRAFTING barrels. They had none of the machinery shown here. They used hand held 'draw shave' knives to taper the individual planks. They mostly used a fire with (presumably moist) wood planks to bend the planks. If I remember right, the planks were at least partially bent INDIVIDUALLY before assembly It was amazing that by hand, they could make them water tight. They produced two barrels per day.

    • @SuperPhexx
      @SuperPhexx Год назад

      Dude.. the double spaces makes it really hard to read your text.

    • @qaisralasdi
      @qaisralasdi Год назад

      ان الله لكم حسيب ورقيب اتقو الله هذا فسق وفجور صناعه برميل خمبر

    • @fivemega1
      @fivemega1 Год назад

      @@qaisralasdi. . . چرا کانال عوض کردی؟ . .
      .

  • @johnpotter8039
    @johnpotter8039 10 месяцев назад +1

    A bit of age-of-sail barrel lore. Ordinary water became undrinkable after long storage. The most-prized water came from the New Jersey Pine Barrens. The area had been populated with cedar trees during the last Ice Age. As they died out, the trunks became part of the soil. Streams running from the area were stained brown by the buried cedar, known as "Cedar Water". The tannic acid and other chemicals kept the water drinkable for years. The only downside is that it stained sailors' teeth brown.

  • @haroldcrook4055
    @haroldcrook4055 Год назад

    Amazing. Thanks for the look.

  • @williamsedlock3903
    @williamsedlock3903 8 месяцев назад

    I wish we could get some quality like this in the United States without it costing you your first born these are some very nicely built barrels and show their quality

  • @Yourweakminds
    @Yourweakminds Год назад +1

    Only drummers need apply!

  • @vladimirbesancon479
    @vladimirbesancon479 11 месяцев назад

    Magnifique !

  • @warmanhall8951
    @warmanhall8951 Год назад +1

    Very cool! Thanks for sharing.

  • @nps-ddpsavinglives
    @nps-ddpsavinglives Год назад +2

    Very interesting video love this technology... To think before all of this automation this was all done by hand.. There is still a lot of hand human interaction but very interesting..

  • @ronaldnoll3247
    @ronaldnoll3247 11 месяцев назад

    Sehr interessantes Video, allerdings fehlen etliche Erklärungen bei bestimmten Arbeitsschritten.
    Von mir gibt es einen Daumen nach oben.
    Very interesting video, but a number of explanations for certain work steps are missing.
    It's a thumbs up from me.

  • @poly_hexamethyl
    @poly_hexamethyl Год назад +2

    Wow, that was really interesting! I didn't know how much goes into the making of barrels. I'd imagine they'd be pretty expensive?!

    • @froth7133
      @froth7133 Год назад

      I knew how expensive they were … now I know why. 😂

  • @quacksbruchpilot
    @quacksbruchpilot Год назад

    Was soll denn da bitte verrückt sein? Das ist hochinteressant!

  • @toddavis8603
    @toddavis8603 Год назад

    Super coopers! Lots of board feet of oak utilized here.Whiskey or wine?

  • @edward9
    @edward9 Год назад +1

    What’s a big barrel sell for? 500 USD?

  • @manibeyk2986
    @manibeyk2986 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for all 👍

  • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve
    @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve Год назад +4

    What an incredible process and skill! I wish they had shown where the wood comes from and what kind of trees, and how they’re chosen and harvested.

    • @HAL-su8uc
      @HAL-su8uc Год назад

      Canada White Oak.

    • @georgehebbard1974
      @georgehebbard1974 Год назад

      Much easier to just soak the wood in liquid ammonia, shape barrels, let ammonia flash off. Barrels will also be tighter after ammonia is recycled.

  • @MrLewooz
    @MrLewooz 11 месяцев назад

    imagine the time it took in ancient time to make one BY HAND starting by shaping every single piece of wood....................

  • @Tiberiotertio
    @Tiberiotertio Год назад

    So crazy and what a crazy channel, what kind of crap youtube is suggesting unbelieveable

  • @articvinter
    @articvinter 11 месяцев назад

    Empty barrels, most tumble

  • @LBG-cf8gu
    @LBG-cf8gu Год назад +4

    very interesting! i can think of worse ways to make a living. do skilled manual labour, seeing an actual, tangible, beautiful barrel. sounds like a job worth going to. coopers before the industrial revolution would be astonished, to say the least. well presented. thx

  • @Damoinion
    @Damoinion Год назад +5

    Nice to see that cooperage is still a very hands-on trade.

  • @song4908
    @song4908 9 месяцев назад +1

    미친기술이다

  • @rheffner3
    @rheffner3 Год назад

    I wonder how much they cost. Must be a lot with all the work that goes into them. And how long to they last?

  • @andiestwo5
    @andiestwo5 Год назад +2

    That is fascinating ❤ These are true craftsman.

  • @gaetantinguely4632
    @gaetantinguely4632 Год назад

    quel travail remarquable

  • @phillipzx3754
    @phillipzx3754 Год назад

    The girl wearing ear protection. 😁

  • @nigelhaines7900
    @nigelhaines7900 Год назад

    well impressed

  • @n.jorgji8101
    @n.jorgji8101 Год назад +1

    Άξιοι!

  • @morkovija
    @morkovija Год назад

    Approximate cost - 800 eur. Just to give you an idea. obviously depends on a barrel size and type

  • @davidh4514
    @davidh4514 11 месяцев назад

    There was a brewery in Yorkshire that had a guy making and repairing their barrels, no machinery or glues or sealants, no idea if its still going on.

  • @AffordBindEquipment
    @AffordBindEquipment Год назад

    12:05 Monster conga!

  • @fraserskomorowski2311
    @fraserskomorowski2311 Год назад +1

    Looks like to only one concerned for going deaf was the young lady at 11:42. Couldn't see anyone else with some type of earplug/muff. OSHA Intensifies !!

  • @carlosalbertopino2137
    @carlosalbertopino2137 Год назад +2

    Excelente para los que no vivieron la época de los que no vivieron los buenos momentos de su buena parte del trabajo de un buen lugar donde siempre nace una buena jornada. Excelente amigos

  • @dennisconrad6124
    @dennisconrad6124 Год назад

    Where is this at?

  • @warchitect73
    @warchitect73 10 месяцев назад

    the art of how to make something over complicated to the point of insanity.

  • @conscience-commenter
    @conscience-commenter Год назад +1

    Some narration voice over of each step would have made the video more enjoyable .

  • @cryon7260
    @cryon7260 Год назад +1

    Please tell me he didn't use silicone cartridge to seal the lid !?

    • @d.jensen5153
      @d.jensen5153 Год назад

      Whatever he did, it was what the customer ordered.

    • @cryon7260
      @cryon7260 Год назад

      @@d.jensen5153
      Shure

  • @johnizitchiforalongtime
    @johnizitchiforalongtime 11 месяцев назад

    New or old, they are expensive to buy. For ornaments, landscaping or for down spouts. Wonderfully made.

  • @ssnoc
    @ssnoc Год назад +1

    Very labor intensive and cool process - the bottom looks difficult to install - wonder what a barrel costs, anyone know ?

    • @guyl4231
      @guyl4231 Год назад +1

      225 litres = between 1,000 & 1,700 Euros

  • @frankbullitt4556
    @frankbullitt4556 Год назад

    very slick ideas. What do they cost each?

  • @AlexTeixeira-bm2hb
    @AlexTeixeira-bm2hb Год назад

    Trabalho lindo 👏👏👏

  • @regisvoiclair
    @regisvoiclair Год назад +1

    Super !
    MERCI !

  • @Richard-od7yd
    @Richard-od7yd Год назад

    🎼 Roll out the barrel ..

  • @roberthoug7864
    @roberthoug7864 Год назад +1

    How much are they sold for is my question and how many can be made in a day or in an 8 hour shift Eagle

  • @marc1553
    @marc1553 11 месяцев назад

    How much do they charge for the barrels?

  • @profepik7525
    @profepik7525 Год назад +2

    Personne ici pour s'apercevoir que les images ont été mélangées au montage et que l'on a perdu l'ordre logique des étapes ?

    • @madebymax_yt
      @madebymax_yt Год назад +1

      A bon j'ai regardé jusqu'au bout j'ai pas l'impression que les images soient mélangées

  • @baronoflivonia.3512
    @baronoflivonia.3512 Год назад

    Modern Cooperage facility, a lot different from when I was a child.

  • @juliosales2844
    @juliosales2844 Год назад

    Muito interessante, otimo video.

  • @maretranquillity
    @maretranquillity Год назад +1

    An interesting video, but it would have been more informative if there had been a voice-over explaining the processes a bit.

  • @Peter_Riis_DK
    @Peter_Riis_DK Год назад +1

    I've never seen a real cooper use glue or sealant. And when do they make the _giant_ barrels?

  • @zullimotormotor2886
    @zullimotormotor2886 Год назад +1

    Ini bukan tehnik gila ngomong sbrg ini lah tehnik yg jenius pintar menciptakan drum dari kayu bagus sejak abat ke 18

  • @greg12345
    @greg12345 11 месяцев назад

    What is with that cauld for the ends?! Won't that foul what ever is aged in the barrel?

  • @corvavw6447
    @corvavw6447 Год назад

    Zag dit 60 jaar geleden in Amsterdam elke dag, toen alles op handgranaten.

  • @jamesbizs
    @jamesbizs 11 месяцев назад

    Ok. And which techniques were crazy?

  • @davidhenryandthemysterons3220
    @davidhenryandthemysterons3220 Год назад

    Looks like a Barrel of laughs😔

  • @mottthehoople693
    @mottthehoople693 Год назад +1

    where was the crazy bit? I missed it....

  • @andrewhammond1949
    @andrewhammond1949 Год назад

    Why do giants need barrels? And what do they do with them?

  • @ItAintMeBabe99
    @ItAintMeBabe99 Год назад

    Good video but I sure wish they explained what they were doing, applying, coating , gluing, etc.

  • @wangsam2049
    @wangsam2049 11 месяцев назад

    That's why we meet many drunkers every night.

  • @harrywernsman9045
    @harrywernsman9045 Год назад

    How much can each barrel hold?

  • @sladelewis2421
    @sladelewis2421 Год назад

    11:44 - warehouse 7

  • @stanpritchard7436
    @stanpritchard7436 Год назад +1

    Why are they using sealants on the ends of the barrels, true coopers did not need to do that,, this only goes to show that mechanised construction, is inferior to a true coopers work, and expertise.

    • @aleksandersuur9475
      @aleksandersuur9475 Год назад +1

      Not so, beeswax is the traditional way to seal barrels. It's just put in a modern dispenser. Sure the wooden construction itself is sufficient to seal the barrel, when it's brand new. But no wooden barrel stays new forever, sooner or later they all start leaking. Wax is there to make sure it's later not sooner.

  • @franznarf
    @franznarf 10 месяцев назад

    Folli 😂

  • @kaptnkirk2740
    @kaptnkirk2740 Год назад

    Aber mit Silikon abdichten ist jetzt nicht so appetitlich, gell?

  • @notinmanitou
    @notinmanitou Год назад

    Some narration would have been nice. Not knowing anything about this process, I didn't have a clue what was going on or why.

  • @wagnerdressman8422
    @wagnerdressman8422 Год назад

    Verpackung ist alles! Ich würde vorschlagen, die Fässer noch in einem Karton zu versenden-dann natürlich wieder Folie rum!!!

  • @บิ๊กรักดี
    @บิ๊กรักดี 11 месяцев назад

    This for my rom

  • @faure5648
    @faure5648 Год назад

    Plus aucune magie de la fabrication, nouveau boulot : serviteur de robot ! le Monde tourne très mal, quel est le sens de tout ça ? vivement le Grand Boycot, qu'on retrouve la Belle Verte...

  • @PyroFalcon
    @PyroFalcon Год назад

    What's the difference between silver vs black banded barrels?

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 11 месяцев назад

      Rust and no rust?

  • @everioke
    @everioke Год назад

    All this work to go over the Niagara Falls.