Finishing (also known as double matured or wood-finished) is the procedure that some whiskeys undergo where the spirit is matured in a cask of a particular origin and then spends time in a cask of different origin (from a couple of months up to the entire maturation[citation needed]) Typically, the first cask is an American oak cask formerly used to mature bourbon. The second cask may be one that has been used to mature some sort of fortified wine, often sherry, though sometimes casks for port, madeira, or even red burgundy or chardonnay are used.
Some of the
more well-known finished whiskies include Balvenie "Doublewood",
which is finished in sherry casks; Oak & Eden In-Bottle Finished Whiskey,
which is finished with a spiral-cut piece of wood inside the bottle; Angel's
Envy bourbon, which is finished in port and rum barrels; Glenlivet
"American Oak Finish" and "French Oak Finish", which are
finished in brand-new casks of the respective woods; the Glenmorangie range of
sherry,[1] port, madeira, and burgundy finishes; and the Diageo line of
"Distiller’s Editions", a "Double Matured" expression of
each of their classics line of single malt scotch whiskies.
SHERRY
CASKS PART ONE: WHAT WAS A SHERRY CASK?
Posted on
28 November 2014 by Billy
Once you
start getting into whisky, one of the first things you notice is the various
types of cask that the spirit is matured in. While they all have their own
distinctive character, the most common question we get asked is ‘Was this
matured in a sherry cask?’
Such a
simple question; such a difficult answer. Normally, we go for a simple yes or
no, but, as usual, things are much more complicated than that.
Firstly,
there is no legal definition for ‘sherry cask’. The Scotch Whisky Regulations
2009 (the rules governing what Scotch whisky is and how it can be presented)
don’t contain the word ‘sherry’, and the only mention of casks is to ensure
that they are made of oak and have a capacity of less than 700 litres (SWR2009
3.(1)(c))
JerezSo,
what about sherry? There is a legal definition there, given that sherry is very
strictly controlled by the Consejo Regulador (the regulatory board). Sherry
wines have to come from within a region in southern Spain, an area known as The
Sherry Triangle as the boundaries have traditionally been drawn between the
three towns of Jerez de la Frontera, Sanlúcar de Barrameda and El Puerto de
Santa María. While sherry is a tightly regulated term, with many wines outside
of the area made in the same way unable to use the name, the addition of the
word ‘cask’ makes it more generic and uncontrolled. The Consejo Regulador are
looking to get more control over the term, but as yet, if a cask has held a
sherry-style fortified wine, then most producers consider it to be a sherry
cask.
So,
strictly speaking, while it technically may not have been sherry that was
previously in a sherry cask, we know it’s almost certainly something very
similar. But that still doesn’t fully answer the question of what a sherry cask
is.
Casks have
been used in the sherry business for a variety of reasons over the years, but
these days, the most common use is in the solera. Soleras are a key part of how
sherry is aged, and while the term pops up in other parts of the drinks world
(especially in whisky and rum in recent years), a sherry solera is usually
quite different. Simply put, it’s a set of casks with an order. Each time you
want to extract some sherry, you remove some (never all) from the final cask in
the set, and then refill it with wine from the next in line. It in turn is
filled from the next, and so on, working back through the casks until you hit
the first one, which is refilled with new wine. This process blends old wines
with newer ones repeatedly through the maturation process, meaning that changes
in the finished wine, always drawn from the last cask in the solera, will be
slow, allowing the wine’s character to be consistent over the years.…
Unlike
whisky, sherry maturation is not focused on extracting flavour from the casks,
and as such solera casks are almost always old, with little flavour left to
give. They’re not new when they are added, and if a cask is ever removed from a
solera, it’s almost certainly due it being broken or leaky. While a whisky
matured in a sherry cask is obviously influenced by the sherry infused into the
wood, it also interacts with the wood of the cask, and while a solera cask
might have lots of sherry flavour concentrated into its staves, the wood itself
is not going to have a big effect. These sorts of casks might be useful for
certain whiskies, but they are far from being common – the sort of sherry cask
you usually see is modelled on the transport cask.
Before
1981, sherry was often shipped around the world in wood. The sherry would be
filled into the cask and then emptied at its destination, only staying in the
cask for the duration of its journey. Even as far back as the 16th century,
that would only be a matter of months – the time taken to travel from Jerez to
northern Europe and then be sold – but it was enough to get lots of sherry
flavour into the wood. Once a cask was emptied of sherry it would then be
reused, and one of the traditional secondary occupants was whisky. There were
significantly more of these transport casks in the wild than old solera casks,
and the traditional Scotch whisky sherry-matured character is almost certainly
based on whiskies matured in them.
However, I
mentioned 1981 above, the year that Spanish export regulations for sherry
changed, and the use of transport casks was outlawed. Along with the downturn
in popularity of sherry, this has severely impacted the supply of casks to
distillers, leading to both a huge increase in price (they currently go for
more than 10 times the price of an ex-bourbon cask) and a new business: the
construction of sherry casks for the whisky industry.
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