HOW SHERRY IS MATURED TO PROVIDE CASKS FOR WHISKY
Sherry is a fortified wine made from white grapes in Spain. The key sherry producing Spanish region is Andalusia. It starts life much like a wine. But after fermentation grape spirit is added to the base liquid. This increases the alcohol content, earning it the name "fortified" wine.
Sherry is, in fact, a collective term for eight different
wine styles: Fino, Manzanilla, Amontillado, Palo Cortado, Oloroso, Pedro
Ximénez, Moscatel, and Cream (which can be further categorized into Medium,
Pale Cream, and Cream Sherry). These styles mainly differ in: (a) production
location (Fino vs Manzanilla), (b) grape varieties (traditionally Palomino
Fino, Pedro Ximénez, or Moscatel. The new regulation has included six more
varieties), and (c) aging process (biological aging and/or oxidative aging). Of
all the Sherry wine styles, six are most relevant to whisky.
The Real Sherry Casks
To understand why people lament the quality of Sherry casks
used in whisky maturation nowadays, let’s take a step back and talk about the
OG. What are Sherry casks, really?
American white oak is often used to make barrels for the
aging of Sherry, because it is widely available, provides good breathability,
and is low in tannins. Now comes the surprise! Although new oak barrels might
be used at the fermentation stage (a practice that has mostly been replaced by
steel tanks), Sherry is actually aged in old, inactive oak barrels.
Unlike other wine makers who try to “arrange a perfect
marriage” between wood and fermented grape liquid, Sherry makers want the oak
barrels without the wood impact. Why is that so? It is said that wood tannins
tend to inhibit flor during the aging process. Also, Sherry makers simply don’t
want wood flavors and tannins in Sherry wines. To avoid that, Sherry makers
commonly use 600-liter oak barrels (three times bigger than standard American
Bourbon barrels) for a lower wine-to-wood ratio.
In addition, before an oak barrel is “qualified” for the job
of Sherry maturation, it has to be first used to ferment grape musts or to age
young fortified wines for a minimum of 3 years by law (but often much longer in
practice). That means that by the time an oak barrel is used to age Sherry, the
impact of wood has more or less been exhausted. In fact, Sherry doesn’t get
flavors from oak barrels. Instead, it gets flavors mainly through oxidization.
It might also soak up some aromas from the young fortified wines previously
aged in these oak barrels.
Sherry Casks in Whisky Maturation
Now you know the specific requirements of oak barrels for Sherry maturation. You might think, like Bourbon casks, the Sherry casks used in whisky maturation are the oak barrels retired from Sherry maturation, right? No. Not even in the good old days!
In those days, the Sherry casks used in whisky
maturation were oak barrels used to transport aged Sherry from Spain to UK.
Originally made from European oak, these transport casks had a capacity of 500
litres. Similar to the oak barrels for Sherry maturation, these transport casks
were first used for fermentation or short periods of maturation, so as to
reduce wood impact during transportation. Then, they were filled with aged
Sherry and shipped to UK. Until the aged Sherry was bottled, it could stay in
these transport casks for up to several months. During this process, a good
amount of aged Sherry would seep into the wood pores. As you may guess, it
didn’t make economic sense to ship these empty transport casks back to Spain.
So, they were sold to the whisky industry for re-use.
Sadly, in 1986, the Spanish introduced a law dictating that
all Sherry wines shall be bottled in Spain, effectively putting an end to
transportation and transport casks. It should be mentioned that, before this
law, there were already practices to make barrels that mimic the effects of
those Sherry-seasoned transport casks. But this law has, unintentionally,
turned these practices into large-scale business operations involving three
parties. Whisky distilleries specify their cask requirements – the wood type,
the toasting level, the type of Sherry used for seasoning, and etc. Spanish
cooperages produce new oak casks accordingly. Once they’re done, the new oak
casks are sent to Spanish bodegas for Sherry seasoning.
The Certified “Sherry Cask” Guarantee Label
In 2015, Consejo Regulador registered the “Sherry Cask”
brand and drafted a document to regulate the production of Sherry-seasoned
casks for quality control. To obtain the “Sherry Cask” guarantee label, the
production of Sherry-seasoned casks should meet the following criteria:
- The cask has to be filled to at least 85% of the total volume, with a certified Sherry wine made by bodegas registered with Consejo Regulador.
- The cask has to continuously hold the wine at the required fill level throughout the entire seasoning process. This means bodegas can’t empty the cask and re-fill it with other wines in between.
- The minimum seasoning period is one year.
Reading between the lines, there are three factors that will
affect the quality of a Sherry cask but are not specified by Consejo Regulador:
- Age of Sherry: Although the wine has to be a certified Sherry, there’s no regulation about the wine age. Word has it that producers typically use 2-year-old Sherry wines.
- Re-use of Sherry: Furthermore, there’s no regulation about how many times the same wine can be re-used for seasoning! In practice, it is often re-used for several times before being discarded or being used to distill Sherry brandy or Sherry vinegar. Theoretically, a cask seasoned with a “virgin” wine can be quite different from a cask seasoned with a re-used wine, as a re-used wine contains more wood tannins.
- Transportation: There’s no regulation about how the casks should be transported, either. Should they be transported dry? Should they be transported with Sherry? How much Sherry should these casks contain during transportation? These are, again, up to whisky distilleries.
Whisky distilleries typically have a say in these factors when making an order. Or, at least, they know what casks they are paying for. But I guess such information is too wordy for the aesthetics of their fancy product packaging; and it takes them too much effort to put it online.
How can you tell if a whisky has been aged in a Sherry
cask?
There are several ways to tell if a whisky has been
aged in a Sherry cask, but the most definitive method is by reading the label
or packaging of the bottle. If a whisky is labelled as "Sherry cask
matured" or "Sherry cask finished" it means that the whisky has
been aged in casks that previously held Sherry. If the label doesn't mention
anything about Sherry, it doesn't necessarily mean that the whisky wasn't aged
in a Sherry cask. Some distilleries use Sherry casks as part of their ageing
process without mentioning it on the label.
Another way to tell if a whisky has been aged in a Sherry
cask is by tasting it. Sherry cask whisky will have distinct and complex
flavours such as dried fruit, nuttiness, and sweetness, with a hint of vanilla,
caramel, and honey. Additionally, it will have a characteristic dryness and a
hint of spice from the oak. The finish can be long and warming with a distinct Sherry
influence.
It's also worth noting that, more often than not,
distilleries use Sherry casks to finish the whisky after ageing it in other
types of casks. This can also impart Sherry notes to the whisky but the
intensity will be less than a Sherry cask matured whisky.
AN OVERVIEW AND COMPARISON OF SHERRY CASKS
|
The Real Sherry Cask for Sherry Maturation |
Transport Cask for Sherry Transportation |
Today’s Certified Sherry Cask for Whisky
Maturation |
Wood |
American oak |
European oak |
Both, although American oak is commonly used
now |
Volume |
600 litres |
500 litres |
Typically 250 litres (aka hogsheads) |
Treatment before Its Intended Use |
Used for least 3 years to ferment grape musts or age young fortified wines. |
Used to ferment grape musts or age young fortified wines for a short period of time. |
Seasoned with a certified Sherry wine (often 2 year old) for at least one year. |
Implications for Whisky Maturation |
These casks are rarely used in whisky maturation. |
Aged Sherry is absorbed into wood pores. |
Young Sherry is absorbed into wood pores. |
Most of this post has been copied from Alyssa’s article on Malt.com and can be found at this source: https://malt-review.com/2021/12/03/a-whisky-beginners-guide-to-sherry-casks/ and from https://topwhiskies.com/
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