"I used the two sticks shown in the picture earlier in this thread ... the ones that look to be between a medium and dark toast. And as usual, sir, you are correct. The aroma and flavor are not very appealing. I only sampled a teaspoon worth from each ... not even close to something I'd be proud of. Since they were basically identical by the 10 day mark, I decided to combine the contents into a single jar with one stick. I'm going to just let this continue and I'll snap a photo every so often along the way.
I've read that the toasted sticks take a good while (measured in months rather than days/weeks) to have any significant effect on the flavor ... and that the flavor is likely to get considerably worse before it gets better?? But I also read a paper from Copper Run Distillery that makes the statement:
Quote:Indeed, we've not been a fan of Bourbon generally, but we have found corn whiskey aged in a medium toast American wine barrel strikingly superior to most any Bourbon available on the market.
Which is pretty much me ... I'm not a fan of Bourbon ... I guess just don't like the corn flavor. But I'm encouraged by their apparent enthusiasm for toasted (v. charred). I'm thinking that many complaints about aging on toasted oak are due to poor quality distillate from the get-go, then a failure to give it enough time. Or conversely, that some preferences for charred sticks/chips are because it provides a quicker filtering fix to poorly distilled spirit (i.e. - it's more of a filtering/masking activity rather than a true aging activity). Please note that I fully acknowledge a
personal preference for true charred
aging. So no criticsms intended along those lines.
Anyway, I hope you get that pantry cabinet completed without too much more bother. But I know how those projects go. I just spent the entire long weekend on a very simple replacement of some roman shades. It was the ""project from hell."" There was no way to get those things installed without drilling into the window frame ... other than building out some custom framing. So rather than simply driving in nine screws, I was measuring, sawing, sanding, painting, squaring ... then finally came the nine screws!
I ended up using red oak ... was wondering if the scraps had any potential for toasting???
--JB"