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Barrel Aging
Barrel Aging
Oak barrels are not inert containers — they are active participants in the flavor of wine, spirits, and vinegar. The liquid extracts soluble compounds from the wood (tannins, vanillin, clove-like eugenol, coconut-and-peach oak lactones, sugars); absorbs limited oxygen through the wood’s pores; and undergoes slow chemical reactions that drive the contents toward a harmonious equilibrium. The barrel-making process — particularly toasting and charring — transforms the wood’s own cell-wall molecules into new aromatic compounds, making the cooper as much a flavor craftsman as the distiller or winemaker.