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Home Forums Whiskey Barrels Preserved with Sulfites

  • Barrels Preserved with Sulfites

    Posted by fldme on September 13, 2013 at 11:25 am

    Why would a craft distiller choose to age their wares in a barrel that has been treated with sulfites?

    roger replied 11 years, 3 months ago 3 Members · 7 Replies
  • 7 Replies
  • porter

    Member
    September 13, 2013 at 1:20 pm

    I would have to ask why you asking the question? Did someone sell you sulphited barrels?

  • fldme

    Member
    September 13, 2013 at 1:23 pm

    yes, I ordered from a new company to us, and the barrels were sulfited. they said standard practice for them on their craft barrels, it was requested so much, now it is standard. They took them back.

  • porter

    Member
    September 13, 2013 at 2:13 pm

    Interesting……..I’ve heard of it as standard practice in the wine market. You sulphite the wine anyway and barrel treatment just means you can put the wine direct to barrel without sulphiting first. Just keeps things from growing it in if not used right away.

    Guess it would be the same for spirits. If you don’t use a barrel for 3 months after it’s made it could grow things in it. I would think the sulphites could be rinsed out easily though.

  • fldme

    Member
    September 13, 2013 at 6:27 pm

    No way to get it out. I just wonder why so many distillers thought they needed them sulfited.

  • porter

    Member
    September 13, 2013 at 6:46 pm

    I would be asking if those requesting the sulphited barrels were wine makers or distillers. I can’t find a thing on using sulphites in whiskey barrels other than to preserve the barrel after using it with wine, then rinse out and use for whiskey. Which is what the Scots have been doing for their fine drink for many years.

    Not sure who told you it can’t be removed though. It leaches out with the water when rinsed. Not that I would buy a new one that way, but I would any used wine barrels to come that way so it would have a mold in them before I got to use them.

  • fldme

    Member
    September 14, 2013 at 2:18 am

    They were distillers. The barrels left here going to another distiller. Have you ever heard of all of the trouble Scottish distillers had with sulfites effecting their whiskey? And that is why they contract with sherry producers so that they get unsulfited barrels. That is the biggest thing hurting micros, misinformed people informing other potential distillers.

  • roger

    Member
    September 14, 2013 at 12:15 pm

    If you would list the name of the copper, I will attempt to find out from them their reasoning ( or what they have heard from thier customers ) as to the reason for the added sulfite. I would assume this addition is a “time sensitive” issue , ie there is nothing which will “outlive” the alcohol that eventually goes into an alcohol barrel , that the sulfite would prevent or kill. So the reasoning would seem to be a “preemptive” application while waiting for fill.

    But as you so correctly point out, misinformation is our biggest threat, we should most certainly attempt to get to the bottom of issues like this. After all, maybe we should be sulfiting ?

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