Bourbon Barrels

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by Dr_Bahmbay13, Jun 6, 2015.

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  1. Dr_Bahmbay13

    Dr_Bahmbay13 Pooh-Bah (1,751) Mar 10, 2013 Michigan
    Pooh-Bah

    With the ever rising style trending I am wondering now after watching a Greggs Beer Review video and something he touched on, when doing these BBA aged stouts and other beers or other type of spirit fermenter vessels for that matter are they freshly used barrels ? Seems that these too me are probably in high demand.
     
  2. AlienSwineFlu

    AlienSwineFlu Savant (1,135) Dec 14, 2012 Ohio

    Sometimes, yeah. But I've also seen/heard of barrels being used from distilleries that had been defunct for 10+ years as well.
     
  3. Smakawhat

    Smakawhat Grand High Pooh-Bah (7,191) Mar 18, 2008 Maryland
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah

    What do you mean fresh?

    Some barrels hold a spirit for a few years to several... all depends..
     
  4. bushycook

    bushycook Zealot (681) Jan 31, 2011 Virginia

    If a beer is termed BBA, then yes I would expect it to be aged in a fairly freshly dumped barrel. And barrels may be becoming scarce, I don't know, because of all the BA beers being produced now. But there's more bourbon being produced today, also. Think about it, for it to be bourbon, it has to be aged in a newly made, charred, American white oak barrel. So there's more barrels being produced than ever before. Breweries just have to fight it out with scotch distilleries, maple syrup makers, hot sauce makers, soy sauce brewers, and coffee roasters also wanting to get their hands on them. So everyone should do like me, drink more bourbon so the price of all these BBA delicacies doesn't get too ridiculous. Keep them coopers a cooperin'!
     
  5. Ballard7003

    Ballard7003 Initiate (0) Dec 1, 2013 Georgia

    Clown Shoes did this with 40 year old Jamaican rum barrels for Hammer of the Holy. Still had phenomenal barrel characteristics.
     
  6. pat61

    pat61 Initiate (0) Dec 29, 2010 Minnesota

    To be a bourbon they must age it in brand new fresh barrels. The Bourbon distillers started selling the used barrels to the Scots after prohibition to the pointt where by 1981 97% of scotch was aged in used bourbon barrels. That has dropped a litttle and the Scots are using more used maderia, port and sherry barrels as well as wine barrels. So there are plenty of used bourbon barrels to be had and it is cheaper to ship a used bourbon barrel from Kentucky to Chicago, New York or San Diego or where ever than to ship it Port Ellen, Scotland.
     
  7. infuturity

    infuturity Crusader (490) Apr 26, 2015 Massachusetts

    You misunderstand what they mean by "40 year old." That does not mean the Rum was removed 40 years ago...
    It means that the barrels aged the rum for 40 years before being emptied.
     
    chrismattlin likes this.
  8. Jirin

    Jirin Initiate (0) Apr 28, 2013 Massachusetts

    I thought bourbon barrels were easy to get for brewers because bourbon barrels can only be used for bourbon once.
     
  9. nc41

    nc41 Initiate (0) Sep 25, 2008 North Carolina
    Trader

    That's true, but as I've learned the guys in Scotland like them too, for their scotch. So easy might be true depending on how much you want to pay, I imagine demand has driven the price up.
     
    bushycook likes this.
  10. erichall

    erichall Initiate (0) Nov 13, 2008 Kentucky

    Bourbon barrels will eventually fall apart if they do not have a liquid inside.

    Freshly dumped barrels are also crucial. Freshly dumped barrels can hold gallons of bourbon in the wood.
     
    BrettHead likes this.
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