Wine Making Barrels

How Wine Making Barrels Are Made

Wine making barrels are made up of staves, and these staves have been shaped into a bulging cylinder, and flat and heavy ends, and the wine making barrels are shaped the way they are because the barrel can easily be rolled this way; or at least that was what the original intention was, nowadays they generally use machines to transport the barrels from place to place anyway.

There are also different types of wine making barrels available, with the most common types being: Bordeaux Barrel, Burgundy Barrel, Whiskey Barrel, and the Hogshead Barrel. The dimensions also vary from barrel to barrel, and so whether you are purchasing wine, or creating it yourself, you need to take this into consideration when deciding on which wine making barrels to choose.

The woods that have been chosen as being best for wine making are several, and their reasons for being chosen are plenty. Such as French Oak, which is incredibly strong and durable, and which was one of the original decided woods that was chosen for that of wine making.

American Oak was also experimented with for a while, although it was not as successful as some of the other options because the oak itself had too much influence on the contents of the barrels. American Oak still remains to be used, as although it was first thought that the problem was with the wood itself, it was later determined that the difficulties were in fact caused by the way that the wood and barrel were prepared and constructed.

The actual construction process of the wine making barrel is particularly complex, and starts off with the cooper selecting the best staves, which he then assembles inside of a metal hoop which acts as a sort of jig device.

Many beginning winemakers question about where they can and should go in order to get wine making barrels, and since there are many excellent locations you can go, the best idea here is to simply determine what type of use these barrels are actually going to have. For instance, a 50 gallon barrel has the proper ratio of air exchange through the wood to the wine, and so anything smaller than this may add too much oak flavor and thus cause rapid oxidation of the wine and cause it to spoil.





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