Adding oak chips - A few questions
Moderators: BlackDuck, Beer-lord, LouieMacGoo, philm00x, gwcr
- FedoraDave
- FedoraDave
- Posts: 4208
- Joined: Fri Aug 09, 2013 5:52 pm
- Location: North and west of the city
- Contact:
Adding oak chips - A few questions
I've read about oak chip additions, and assume it's a way to get some barrel-aged influence without using a barrel. I'm becoming intrigued about this technique, and want to try making a different type of beer than what I've been brewing; just to shake my own world up a bit. I have a style/recipe in mind, but I have some questions before I go too much further in this pursuit. Any help would be most welcome.
1) Since the style I'll be working with will be a rye APA, I'm wondering exactly what to expect from the oak chip addition. Mellowing? A rounder mouthfeel? What, exactly, do oak chips bring to the table?
2) When would the addition be made? At the same time as dry-hopping (i.e. about four or five days before bottling/kegging)?
3) Would it require additional conditioning time, which would then potentially influence the dry-hop/aroma/character of an APA?
4) I'm not looking for a bourbon-barrel influence, but can the chips be added dry, or should they be soaked in something, even if it's just water?
5) What would be a good amount for a 2.5 gallon batch?
6) Is an oak addition even a good idea for a rye APA? If so, why? If not, why not?
1) Since the style I'll be working with will be a rye APA, I'm wondering exactly what to expect from the oak chip addition. Mellowing? A rounder mouthfeel? What, exactly, do oak chips bring to the table?
2) When would the addition be made? At the same time as dry-hopping (i.e. about four or five days before bottling/kegging)?
3) Would it require additional conditioning time, which would then potentially influence the dry-hop/aroma/character of an APA?
4) I'm not looking for a bourbon-barrel influence, but can the chips be added dry, or should they be soaked in something, even if it's just water?
5) What would be a good amount for a 2.5 gallon batch?
6) Is an oak addition even a good idea for a rye APA? If so, why? If not, why not?
Obey The Hat!
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
Fedora Brauhaus
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
The whole point to oak chips is to simulate a beer that fermented in a used bourbon barrel. I don't know how they would taste in an IPA. When I do my Bourbon barrel stout once a year I soak 2 oz of oak chips in a pint of whiskey for a week before I brew. Then I dump it all in the fermenter the second week so primary fermentation is done. I suppose you could do the same thing with vodka for an IPA. Accept I would stick with maybe 8 oz of the vodka. That way you wouldn't taste the liquor only the oak. I use a pint of the whiskey because I want the flavor of the whiskey in my stout.
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
I agree with Gymrat.
OR I will just throw this out there as an "easy mode" answer to getting some oak character in your beer - one day you should try a batch just using WLP013 (London Ale) and ferment with it around 68-70 degrees. See what you think of that. The esters it makes when warm are very "oak" like.
OR another thing you might want to try one day is some of this stuff:
http://www.northernbrewer.com/weyermann ... wheat-malt
I hate smoked beers, but I've decided that I love that stuff in moderation.
Not saying you shouldn't do the oak chip thing too, just maybe that you should try those others and see which of them you like the best going forward.
OR I will just throw this out there as an "easy mode" answer to getting some oak character in your beer - one day you should try a batch just using WLP013 (London Ale) and ferment with it around 68-70 degrees. See what you think of that. The esters it makes when warm are very "oak" like.
OR another thing you might want to try one day is some of this stuff:
http://www.northernbrewer.com/weyermann ... wheat-malt
I hate smoked beers, but I've decided that I love that stuff in moderation.
Not saying you shouldn't do the oak chip thing too, just maybe that you should try those others and see which of them you like the best going forward.
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
I've read on another forum, a few recipes that include oak chips in an IPA. I'm pretty sure they soaked them in vodka or gin first before adding them.
I bought some to try and never used them but I think I asked here or the Mr. Beer forums for advice. I know everything I said was to use less than more and for a short period of time.
I bought some to try and never used them but I think I asked here or the Mr. Beer forums for advice. I know everything I said was to use less than more and for a short period of time.
PABs Brewing
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
I have also taken a gallon while kegging and racked it to secondary with an oak addition for about a week. Then bottled those.
I'd have to look at my notes, but I think it was 2 oz of chips to 1/2 or 1 oz of bourbon soaked for 5-7 days. I've done this with a stout, a porter, and a scotch ale. I always wanted the bourbon flavor, so don't know what oak alone will bring.
You could use vodka, and just enough to cover the chips. I think it's to sanitize them more than anything else.
I'd have to look at my notes, but I think it was 2 oz of chips to 1/2 or 1 oz of bourbon soaked for 5-7 days. I've done this with a stout, a porter, and a scotch ale. I always wanted the bourbon flavor, so don't know what oak alone will bring.
You could use vodka, and just enough to cover the chips. I think it's to sanitize them more than anything else.
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
It isn't to sanitize. It is to extract the oak flavor. Just like when you soak vanilla beans, orange peel, coriander, or anything else in Vodka. I am sure it sanitizes also, but so will the beer after primary fermentation is done.MrBandGuy wrote:I have also taken a gallon while kegging and racked it to secondary with an oak addition for about a week. Then bottled those.
I'd have to look at my notes, but I think it was 2 oz of chips to 1/2 or 1 oz of bourbon soaked for 5-7 days. I've done this with a stout, a porter, and a scotch ale. I always wanted the bourbon flavor, so don't know what oak alone will bring.
You could use vodka, and just enough to cover the chips. I think it's to sanitize them more than anything else.
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
The beer will make it resistant to stuff, but it won't "sanitize". It's mostly a matter of what bugs get thrown in with the chips. IE if some types of Brett or a Sacc var. diastaticus strain happened to be on those chips, they would possibly get involved and ferment your beer a bit more. Acetobacter would be another potential bad thing because it eats alcohol. Beer levels of alcohol don't kill it.Gymrat wrote:I am sure it sanitizes also, but so will the beer after primary fermentation is done.
So I'd vodka it to be safe - not just for the flavor extraction.
- The_Professor
- Uber Brewer
- Posts: 1018
- Joined: Wed Aug 14, 2013 4:52 pm
- Location: Calif, USA
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
The few times I have used oak I steamed it.
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
Great Divide makes an awesome Oak Aged IPA called: Rumble
It uses Northwest hops that provide a balance of Citrus and Pine against some caramel malt and notes of caramel, vanilla and bourbon from a blend of French and American oaks upon which it is aged in secondary.
It's a really good IPA and I suggest you all try to get ya some...
Not sure if I would use Rye in it as the added spice from the rye might not play nice within the overall balance... But who knows... It could work in small amounts.
It uses Northwest hops that provide a balance of Citrus and Pine against some caramel malt and notes of caramel, vanilla and bourbon from a blend of French and American oaks upon which it is aged in secondary.
It's a really good IPA and I suggest you all try to get ya some...
Not sure if I would use Rye in it as the added spice from the rye might not play nice within the overall balance... But who knows... It could work in small amounts.
- FedoraDave
- FedoraDave
- Posts: 4208
- Joined: Fri Aug 09, 2013 5:52 pm
- Location: North and west of the city
- Contact:
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
Great responses! Thanks large, everyone. I'm going to continue to mull this over in my mind before working up a recipe/process, and I'll be going over it with my LHBS guys, too. I may not like the resultant beer; who knows. But I like to brew a small experimental batch now and then, just to keep myself from sinking into a rut. I like my current recipes, and I keep them in the pipeline because they're tried and true and they make me happy. But having a hobby that allows me to shake things up a bit and go to the fringe is a neat thing.
Obey The Hat!
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
Fedora Brauhaus
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
These are oak chips we soaked in bourbon for over a week and added to a stout today in the brite tank at work. It definitely mellowed the beer flavor out and provides some nice caramelly and vanilla notes.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
See? That's why I said "I think". And know I know...I was wrong.Gymrat wrote:
It isn't to sanitize. It is to extract the oak flavor.
- HerbMeowing
- Fully Fermented
- Posts: 433
- Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2015 7:05 pm
- Location: ~37°N : ~77°W
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
Here's my experience having oaked with chips multiple times in IPAs and Barleywines;
May turn out to be too much of a good thing.
Rack to 2ndary ... add chips and d-hops.
Rest one week.
In either case ... pitch the chips along with the liquid as I do ... or not.
Don't unless you're trying to super-charge what the rye has to offer.
Having never oaked the rye IPAs I've brewed ... I'd expect oak to sharpen what rye brings to the recipe.FedoraDave wrote:1) Since the style I'll be working with will be a rye APA, I'm wondering exactly what to expect from the oak chip addition. Mellowing? A rounder mouthfeel? What, exactly, do oak chips bring to the table?
May turn out to be too much of a good thing.
Two weeks in primary.FedoraDave wrote:2) When would the addition be made? At the same time as dry-hopping (i.e. about four or five days before bottling/kegging)?
Rack to 2ndary ... add chips and d-hops.
Rest one week.
Additional conditioning time was not my experience.FedoraDave wrote:3) Would it require additional conditioning time, which would then potentially influence the dry-hop/aroma/character of an APA?
Soak the chips in bourbon or vodka for a week or steam 30 secs in a microwave to sanitize.FedoraDave wrote:4) I'm not looking for a bourbon-barrel influence, but can the chips be added dry, or should they be soaked in something, even if it's just water?
In either case ... pitch the chips along with the liquid as I do ... or not.
One ounce ... bagged.FedoraDave wrote:5) What would be a good amount for a 2.5 gallon batch?
Matter of taste.FedoraDave wrote:6) Is an oak addition even a good idea for a rye APA? If so, why? If not, why not?
Don't unless you're trying to super-charge what the rye has to offer.
Homebrew will get you through times of no money
Better than money will get you through times of no homebrew
- apologies to the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers
Better than money will get you through times of no homebrew
- apologies to the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers
- FedoraDave
- FedoraDave
- Posts: 4208
- Joined: Fri Aug 09, 2013 5:52 pm
- Location: North and west of the city
- Contact:
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
I like those responses, Herb. Good stuff to think about.
Obey The Hat!
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
http://www.homebrew-with-the-hat.com
Some regard me as a Sensei of Brewing
Fedora Brauhaus
- RickBeer
- Brew Guru
- Posts: 3099
- Joined: Thu Aug 08, 2013 1:21 pm
- Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan (Go Blue!)
Re: Adding oak chips - A few questions
Where is the picture of Phil drinking the bourbon that was leftover after the oak chips were removed?philm00x wrote: These are oak chips we soaked in bourbon for over a week and added to a stout today in the brite tank at work. It definitely mellowed the beer flavor out and provides some nice caramelly and vanilla notes.
I have over 9,000 posts on "another forum", which means absolutely nothing. Mr. Beer January 2014 Brewer of the Month with all the pomp and circumstance that comes with it...
Certificate in Brewing and Distillation Technology
Sites to find beer making supplies: Adventures in Homebrewing - Mr. Beer - MoreBeer
Certificate in Brewing and Distillation Technology
Sites to find beer making supplies: Adventures in Homebrewing - Mr. Beer - MoreBeer
My Beer - click to reveal