come up with one. I'm looking to develop some aged cocktails for the bar and the boat. There really seems to be a shortage of barrels just about everywhere these days. I was able to get cut up pieces of barrels in Grand Cayman at the Cayman Spirits Distillery, they were selling them for your bar-b-
I ran across this story of the worldwide shortage of barrels, and an expanded group of uses by nearly all facets of the alcohol industry.
Barrel
Aging Is So Hot Right
Modern
Farmer
By
John Adamian
June
30, 2014
People
want to do weird things in old barrels.
And
Gable Erenzo, distiller for Tuthilltown Spirits in Gardner, New York, has heard
it all. Among the uses for the distillery's booze-infused barrels: A local ice
cream shop uses Tuthilltown barrels in some of its ice-cream-making processes.
Fruition, a small-batch craft chocolatier in the Catskills, ages cacao beans in
Tuthilltown's old barrels. Regional maple-syrup makers also use barrels from
the distillery to age their syrup. And then there was the person with a project
involving a whole hog. "I had a guy contact me about aging a whole pig in
one of our barrels," says Erenzo. No telling how that turned out.
Food
fetishists, craft beer people and mixologists have all embraced barrel-aging.
The process can impart caramelized flavors of charred wood sugars, the heat and
vaporous high-notes of spirits and hints of smoke to whatever spends time
sloshing up against the staves of a wooden barrel. Because of the phenolic
units in wood, a charred barrel can impart flavors nearly identical to vanilla
and clove. (It can be too much: Wine makers often limit the barrel-aging time
to avoid creating overpowering flavors. Like vintners, many brewers and
craft-cocktail makers are simply content to impart those sweet and smoky
flavors by using wood chips from old casks.)
But it
sounds a lot cooler to say something is "barrel-aged" than flavored
with "wood chips."
And,
as a result, barrel-aging is high up on the food-trend meter, somewhere below
bacon, pickles and IPAs, somewhere above eating insects. There are already
barrel-aged coffees, barrel-aged honeys, barrel-aged hot-sauces, ciders,
mustards, vinegars, pickles, beers, cocktails and more. We can expect to only
hear about more barrel-aged products in the coming years.
Read more at http://modernfarmer.com/2014/06/sound-barrel-barrel-making-america/
It never fails that when you have a plan for a fun way to make something really good, the
resources you need to make it happen dry up. I'm still looking if anyone has a good sealed up small barrel to do some aging experiments with. ;o)
Barrel-aging
is high up on the food-trend meter, somewhere below bacon, pickles and IPAs,
somewhere above eating insects.
But if
there's a craze for all things barrel-aged, where do all those barrels come
from? With America in the midst of a craft-distilling boom, most of the barrels
being used for aging food products are first used to age spirits. Ten years ago
there were 70 craft distilleries in the U.S. Today there are more than 600,
cooking up gins, whiskeys, vodkas, moonshines, rum and more. The rules
regarding American whiskey (excepting corn whiskey) dictate that the spirit
must be aged in a new charred oak cask. That means every batch requires a new
barrel to meet the specifications. Tuthilltown, for instance, uses an estimated
1,750 standard-size (53-gallon) barrels a year. These barrels are fueling a
secondary market.
Those
barrels, and many of the barrels used by distillers and brewers around the
country, come from Minnesota - from a small company called Black Swan
Cooperage, in Park Rapids. You might imagine that with bartenders, chefs,
confectioners and brewers scrambling to get their hands on barrels, young
craftspeople would be popping up to supply the demand for local barrels, using
wood from nearby stands of forest. But it's not quite that simple.
Read more at http://modernfarmer.com/2014/06/sound-barrel-barrel-making-america/
It never fails that when you have a plan for a fun way to make something really good, the
resources you need to make it happen dry up. I'm still looking if anyone has a good sealed up small barrel to do some aging experiments with. ;o)
I'd love to argue your point, but I have last year's jalapenos aging on oak as we speak! Nearly a year now.
ReplyDeleteHope I don't get the urge to store meat this way!