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Tannins & Oak Barrel Alternatives

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  • Aroma Sciences - Rum Barrel Extract 2X - Caribbean - PLACEHOLDER Aroma Sciences - Rum Barrel Extract 2X - Caribbean - PLACEHOLDER

    Aroma Sciences | Caribbean Rum Barrel Liquid Extract | Double Concentrated | Natural Evaporated Oak Extract

    Impart a perfect replication of barrel aromatics without the lengthy process of barrel ageing Consistent, repeatable results every time without the need to blend various barrels of product together Infuse oak aromatics into beer in minutes. Safe for use with low alcohol beers as there's no risk of infection that comes from barrel ageing beer below 12% ABV Increase the perceived quality of your wine without drastically increasing production overhead or lead time Eliminate the expensive, compounding loss of the "Angel's Share"—spirits typically lose 5-10% of their volume in barrels due to evaporation 2X Concentrate. This is a more concentrated extract than the standard Aroma Science extracts that requires approximately half the typical dosage Rum notes predominate with creamy sweet caramel and fruity notes with coconut and sweet spice. More intense aromatics than the classic series. Use less. Aroma Science's internationally-patented Evaporative Extraction™ technology naturally captures complex aromatics from wine and whiskey barrels to create aroma profiles that are perfect copies of the original barrel source. Use to balance and boost oak aroma in beer, wine, spirits, ciders, seltzers, and traditional, reduced proofed, and nonalcoholic ready-to-drink cocktails. Typical recommended dosing in beer & wine is approximately 0.75-3 mL per gallon and anywhere from 2-30 mL per gallon with spirits. See AromaSciences.com for detailed dosing recommendations for Beer, Wine, and Spirits. Ingredients: Ethanol, Water, Oak Made in the USA

    $18.75 - $414.00

Help With Choosing Oak!
The following are results from research done at Stavin and should only be used to give an approximation of what each of these three varieties of oak can bring to your wine. Each sample was made using oak cubes with a two-month contact time and evaluated with no bottle ageing. Please note that due to the complexities of flavor chemistry these findings may or may not translate to your wine 100%. However, this information should be helpful in finding out which type of oak may the best to start with as you refine your oaking tastes.

French Oak Flavor Summary

  • All toast levels have a perceived aromatic sweetness and full mouthfeel.
  • French oak has a fruity, cinnamon/allspice character, along with custard/ crème brûlée, milk chocolate and campfire/roasted coffee notes*. (*Especially at higher toast levels.)
  • As the toast levels increased the fruity descriptor for the wine changed from fresh to jammy to cooked fruit/raisin in character.

American Oak Flavor Summary

  • The American oak had aromatic sweetness and a campfire/roasted coffee attribute present in all three toast levels, with Medium Plus and Heavy toast having the highest intensity.
  • American oak had cooked fruit more than a fresh or jammy quality.
  • American Oak imparted mouthfeel/fullness, especially in Medium Plus.

Hungarian Oak Flavor Summary

  • The Hungarian oak at Medium toast displayed a high perceived-vanillin content, with roasted coffee, bittersweet chocolate and black pepper characters.
  • Medium Plus and Heavy toast imparted mouthfeel fullness, with only a slight amount of campfire/roasted coffee. Heavy also had pronounced vanillin. At all toast levels, there were unique attributes such as leather and black pepper, not observed in other oak origins.

Some applicable generalizations of toast levels on oak

  • The lower the toast, the more tannins (“structure”) and lactones (“wood-like” and “coconut”) will be present in each of the oaks.
  • The higher the toast, the more spice and smoke notes will be present.
  • The deeper the toast, the more deep the caramel tones will be (moving into butterscotch at medium plus).
  • Vanilla will increase up through a medium-plus toast and then decrease with a heavy toast and char.
  • American oak will be more aromatic, but French oak will give more structure (Hungarian will give less than the French but more than the American).
  • The greater the toast level, the lower the lactones (“wood” and “coconut”) for all three woods.

Medium plus is the most complex of all of the toast levels, and the most popular.

For more in-depth information on oak, please see our Oak Information Paper, as well as the "oak" sections of our Red Winemaking and White Winemaking manuals.

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