Maturation, blending, and packaging

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Also known as: aqua vitae, distilled liquor, water of life
Also called:
distilled liquor

Aging

One method of classifying distilled liquors is as aged or unaged. Vodka, moonshine, neutral spirits for use in a variety of products, most gins, and some rums and brandies are unaged. Aged products are predominantly whiskeys and most rums and brandies.

The term age refers to the actual duration of storage, while maturity expresses the degree to which chemical changes occur during storage. The maturation of whiskeys falls into two categories, according to whether storage is in new or reused cooperage. New charred, white-oak containers are required by law in the United States for the maturation of products to be called straight bourbon or rye whiskey. These containers, each containing 50 to 55 gallons, are stored in warehouses sometimes having controlled temperature and humidity. Older warehouses are called rick houses because the barrels are stored on stationary frames called ricks. In many newer houses, barrels are stacked on pallets.

White oak is one of the few woods that can hold liquids while allowing the process of breathing through the pores of the wood. The pore size of the wood is such that small molecules such as water move through the wood more easily than larger molecules such as alcohol. This breathing process is caused by temperature and humidity differences between the liquid in the barrel and the air in the warehouse. Charring the wood makes some of the wood compounds more soluble. As the liquid in the container moves back and forth through the wood, ingredients are extracted and carried back into the container’s contents. Maturation also results from the contact of oxygen from the outside air with ingredients in the alcohol mixture. Therefore, maturation during aging consists of the interaction of the original compounds of the distillate, of oxidation reactions, and of the extraction of flavouring compounds from the wood. These factors must be well balanced in the properly matured product. The lower the level of the original congeners, the less wood extract required to achieve a good balance.

Outside the United States, reused cooperage is common. Since used containers have already yielded their initial oak extracts, the resulting product is low in extracted flavouring ingredients, which is desirable in some beverages. This maturation method, typified by Scotch and Irish whiskeys, can be carried on in casks holding up to 132 gallons. These casks have usually had previous use for storage or maturation of other whiskeys or wines and may be reused for many maturation cycles. Maturation in dry warehousing increases the alcoholic content of the liquid in the container, but the more common practice for Scotch and Irish whiskeys of maturation in high humidity warehouses reduces the alcoholic concentration.

The maturation procedure for brandies is similar to that of some whiskeys, but the brandies are usually matured in fairly large casks or oak containers. Most brandies are matured for three to five years, but some remain for as long as 20 to 40 years or even longer.

Rum is usually matured in reused oak containers; high concentrations of oak extracts are not considered desirable. Normal maturation time is two to three years, but rum, generally a blended product, may contain a percentage of older rums.

Most governments specify storage time for various products. The United States requires a two-year storage period for most whiskeys but has no requirement for any pure alcohol or neutral spirits (close to 100 percent alcohol) added to such whiskeys in the production of blended whiskey. Canada requires storage of two years for all distilled spirits. Scotland and England require a three-year storage and Ireland, five years for all products classified as whiskey; there are no requirements for vodka and gin.

Blending

Blending is another method of obtaining a balanced product with precise flavour characteristics. Blended products are composed of one or more highly flavoured components, a high-proof component with a low congener content, a colour adjustment ingredient, and perhaps an additional flavouring material. An example is a blended whiskey, which may contain several whiskeys, a grain spirit distilled at 90 to 95 percent alcohol, caramel colouring, and perhaps a small amount of a flavouring blender (part of which may be sherry or port wine). A blended Scotch consists of several highly flavoured malt whiskeys produced in pot stills and a base whiskey produced from grain in a continuous distillation system.

Packaging

Bottling

Distilled spirits react upon exposure to many substances, extracting materials from the container that tend to destroy the liquor aroma and flavour. For this reason, glass, being nonreactive, has been the universal container for packaging alcoholic liquors. (A few products are now packaged in plastic bottles, but these are primarily 50-millilitre miniatures, the light weight of which is particularly suited for use by airlines.) Packaging economics require containers that are standardized in size and shape and that lend themselves to automatic processes.

Early hand methods of filling, labeling, corking, and other operations have been replaced by highly mechanized bottling lines, with bottles cleaned, filled, capped, sealed, labeled, and placed in a shipping container at a rate as high as 400 bottles per minute. This progress became possible with the development of high-strength glass, plastic closures with inert liners, and high-speed machines. Even specialized packaging, long a hand operation, has been replaced by standardization of containers, allowing production on automatic lines.