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AD
Active packaging
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Age wine
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Asia
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Automatic identification and data capture
Bag-In-Box
Balsamic vinegar
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Barrel
Barrel#Sizes
Barrel (disambiguation)
Barrel (unit)
Barrel (volume)
Barrel organ
Barrique
Beer
Beer tap#Cask beer tap
Biodegradation
Blister pack
Blow molding
Bottle
Bottling line
Box
Brandy
Brewing methods#Barrel aging
Bubble Wrap
Bulk box
Bung
Bushel
Butt (volume)
Calendering
Cannon
Carboy
Carton
Cartoning machine
Cask ale
Cellophane
Check weigher
Chestnut
Child-resistant packaging
Closure (container)
Coated paper
Coin
Containerization
Conveyor system
Cooper (profession)
Corrugated box design
Corrugated fiberboard
Corrugated plastic
Crate
Crude oil
Cryptomeria
Cushioning
Cutchogue
Die cutting (web)
Distilled beverage
Draught beer
Drowning
Drum (container)
Earmark (politics)
Earthenware
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Elliptic
Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition
England
English unit
English units of wine casks#Tierce
Environmental engineering
Europe
Evaporation
Extended Core Stretch Wrapper
Extrusion
Extrusion coating
Fermentation (wine)
Firkin
Flexible intermediate bulk container
Flogging
Foam peanut
Folding carton
Food packaging
Fractional distillation
Gallon
Gasoline
Gauls
Glass
Glass recycling
Gold
For other uses, see Barrel (disambiguation).
For the use of oak aging barrels in wine, see Oak (wine).
Traditional wooden barrels in Cutchogue, USA
Beer barrels on Munich Oktoberfest
Modern stainless steel beer barrels—also called casks or kegs—outside the Castle Rock microbrewery in Nottingham, England
A barrel or cask is a hollow cylindrical container, traditionally made of vertical wooden staves and bound by wooden or metal hoops. Traditionally, the barrel was a standard size of measure referring to a set capacity or weight of a given commodity. For example, a beer barrel was originally a 36 gallon capacity while an ale barrel was a 32 gallon capacity. Wine was shipped in 31.5 gallon barrels. Barrels are one size of cask. Other cask sizes include, but are not limited to, pins, firkins, kilderkins, puncheons, rundlets, tierces, pipes, butts, and tuns. Someone who makes barrels is a cooper. Modern barrels are also made of aluminium, stainless steel, and plastic.
Barrels have a variety of uses, including storage of liquids such as water and oil, fermenting wine and sake, and maturing beverages such as brandy, sherry, port, whiskey and beer.
Contents
1 History
2 Water storage
3 Oil storage
4 Beverage maturing
4.1 Wine
4.2 Whiskey
4.3 Sherry
4.4 Cognac
4.5 Other
4.6 Angels' share
5 Other uses
6 Shape
7 Sizes
8 See also
9 References
10 External links
History
In Asia/Europe in ancient times liquids like oil and wine were carried in vessels, for instance amphora, sealed with pine resin. The Romans began to use barrels in the 3rd century AD, as a result of their commercial and military contacts with the Gauls, who had been making barrels for several centuries. Pliny the Elder in the 1st century described how barrels were used to mature wine by producers in the Alps.
For nearly 2,000 years barrels were the most convenient form of shipping or storage container for those who could afford the superior price. All kinds of bulk goods, from nails to gold coins, were stored in them. Bags and most crates were cheaper, but they were not as sturdy and they were more difficult to manhandle for the same weight. Barrels slowly lost their importance in the 20th century, with the introduction of pallet-based logistics and containerization.
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barrel - definition of barrel by the Free Online Dictionary ...
Translations of barrel. barrel synonyms, barrel antonyms. Information about barrel in the free online English dictionary and encyclopedia. pickle barrel, ...
Starting in the late 19th century, barrels were largely superseded by corrugated fiberboard boxes for storage and transport of dry goods, and in the mid 20th century, steel drums began to be used for the storage and transport of fluids such as water, oils and hazardous waste. Barrels are still used today for artistic presentation of merchandise in many stores, although these barrels are often merely decorative, and not made water-tight.
Water storage
Water barrels are often used to collect the rainwater from dwellings (so that it may be used for irrigation or other purposes). This usage, known as rainwater harvesting, requires (besides a large rainwater barrel), an adequate (water-proof) roof-covering and an adequate rain pipe.
Oil storage
Standard Oil Company blue 55-US gallon (46 imp. gal, 208 L) barrel (drum)
Main articles: Drum (container) and Barrel (unit)
The standard barrel of crude oil or other petroleum product (abbreviated bbl) is 42 US gallons (34.9723 imp gal; 158.9873 L). This measurement originated in the early Pennsylvania oil fields, and permitted both British and American merchants to refer to the same unit, based on the old English wine measure, the tierce.
Earlier, another size of whiskey barrel was the most common size; this was the 40 US gallons (33.3 imp gal; 151.4 L) barrel for proof spirits, which was of the same volume as 5 US bushels. However, by 1866 the oil barrel was standardized at 42 US gallons.
Oil has not actually been shipped in barrels 1 since the introduction of oil tankers, but the 42-US-gallon size is still used as a unit for measurement, pricing, and in tax and regulatory codes. Each barrel is refined into about 19.74 US gallons (16.44 imp gal; 74.7 L) of gasoline2, the rest becoming other products such as jet fuel and heating oil, using fractional distillation.3
The current standard volume for barrels for chemicals and food is 55 US gallons (46 imp gal; 208 L).
Beverage maturing
Wine barrels in Napa Valley, California.
Whiskey barrels at the Jack Daniel's distillery
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New Delhi, Mar 18 (PTI) Crude oil prices rose by 1.44 per cent to Rs 4,652 per barrel in futures trading today as speculators enlarged their positions, driven by a firming trend in Asian trade.At the Multi Commodity Exchange, crude oil for delivery in March rose by Rs 66, or 1.44 per cent, to Rs 4,652 per barrel, with a business volume of 5,374 lots.Likewise, the oil for delivery in April moved ...
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Barrels used for aging are typically made of oak, but chestnut and redwood are also used. Some Asian traditions (e.g. Japanese sake) have been known to use Japanese cedar, which imparts an unusual, minty/piney flavor. And in Latin America, "Pisco" is aged in earthenware: minerals from the fired clay leach into the liquor giving it a unique flavor.
Beers are sometimes aged in barrels which were previously used for maturing wines or spirits.
Wine
Some wine is fermented "in barrel," as opposed to a neutral container such as a steel or concrete tank. Wine can also be fermented in large wooden tanks, often called "open-tops" because they are open to the atmosphere. Other wooden cooperage for storing wine or spirits are called "casks", and they are large (up to thousands of gallons) with either elliptical or round heads.
An "aging barrel" is used to age wine; distilled spirits such as whiskey, brandy, or rum; Tabasco sauce; or (in smaller sizes) authentic balsamic vinegar. When a wine or whiskey/whisky ages in a barrel, small amounts of oxygen are introduced as the barrel lets some air in (compare to microoxygenation where oxygen is deliberately added). Oxygen enters a barrel when water or alcohol is lost due to evaporation, a portion known as the "angels' share". In an environment with 100% relative humidity, very little water evaporates and so most of the loss is alcohol, a useful trick if one has a wine with very high proof. Most wines are topped up from other barrels to prevent significant oxidation, although others such as vin jaune are not.
Wine aged in small new oak barrels (Barrique) takes on some of the compounds in the barrel, such as vanillin and wood tannins. The presence of these compounds is dependent on many factors, including the place of origin, how the staves were cut and dried, and degree of "toast" applied during manufacture. After roughly three years, most of a barrel's flavor compounds have been leached out and it is well on its way to becoming "neutral."
I wouldn t have thought of a barrel as an interesting sand sculpture subject but this one is lovingly created and beautifully executed I m impressed that they managed to get lights in the windows of this sandcastle
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barrel: Definition, Synonyms from Answers.com
barrel n. A large cylindrical container, usually made of staves bound together with hoops, with a flat top and bottom of equal diameter
The tastes yielded by French and American species of oak are slightly different, with French oak being subtler, while American oak gives stronger aromas.4 To retain the desired measure of oak influence, a winery will replace a certain percentage of its barrels every year, although this can vary from 5 to 100%. Some winemakers use 200% new oak, where the wine is put into new oak barrels twice during the aging process. Bulk wines are sometimes flavored by soaking oak chips in them instead of barrel aging.
Whiskey
Laws in several jurisdictions require that whiskey be aged in wooden barrels.
The law in the United States requires whiskey (with the exception of corn whiskey) must be stored for at least 2 years in oak containers5, and that Bourbon (in specific) must be be aged in new, charred oak barrels as one of several necessary conditions which have to be met before the whiskey can be labeled as a bourbon whiskey.
International laws require any whiskey bearing the label "Scotch" to be distilled in Scotland and matured for a minimum of three years and one day in oak casks.6
By Canadian law,7 Canadian whiskies must "be aged in small wood for not less than 3 years".
Sherry
The sherry is stored in 600-litre casks that are made of North American oak, which is slightly more porous than French or Spanish oak. The casks, or butts, are filled five-sixths full, leaving "the space of two fists" empty at the top to allow flor to develop on top of the wine.
Cognac
Maturing is very important for a good Cognac, the slow ageing in oak casks. The used wood for those barrels is selected because of its ability to transfer certain aromas to the spirit. Cognac only ages in oak casks made from wood from the Tronçais and more often from the Limousin forests. 8
Other
Brandy and port are sometimes aged in wooden barrels usually oak.
Angels' share
Sherry aging produces fungus on the walls
Oil prices settle above $101 per barrel again
New York— Oil prices soared more than 3.5 percent, climbing back above $101 per barrel today after a crackdown on protesters in Bahrain and the U.S. pressed for U.N. action against Libya's Moammar Gadhafi.
Barrel (unit) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A barrel is one of several units of volume, with dry barrels, fluid barrels (UK beer ... The wooden oil barrel of the late 19th century is different from the ...
"Angels' share" is a term for the portion (share) of a wine or distilled spirit's volume that is lost to evaporation during aging in oak barrels. The barrels are typically French or American oak. In low humidity conditions, the loss to evaporation may be primarily water. However, in higher humidities, more alcohol than water will evaporate, therefore reducing the alcoholic strength of the product. In humid climates, this loss of ethanol is associated with the growth of a darkly colored fungus, Baudoinia compniacensis, on the exterior surfaces of buildings, trees and other vegetation, and anything else that happens to be nearby.9
Sherry barrel with glassed-side to see interior
Other uses
Due to the traditional barrel's distinctive shape and construction method, the term has been used to describe a variety of other related or similar objects, such as the gun barrel (with the term growing out of the fact that early cannon were built from staves of metal hooped together, similar to a barrel)10 and barrel organ.
The English idiom over a barrel means to be in a predicament or helpless in a situation where others are in control: "I have no choice in the matter — my creditors have me over a barrel." The phrase is said to originate from two 19th century practices: rolling drowning victims over a barrel to clear their lungs of water, or flogging someone who is bent over a barrel.
Some kinds of food, such as pork, were stored in barrels in larders before the era of refrigerators. This practice generated a political term, pork barrel, in which earmarks for particular people or locations were labeled "pork-barrel" spending.
A chair can also be made out of a barrel.
Shape
Barrels often have a convex shape, bulging at the middle. This constant bulge makes it easier to roll a well-built wooden barrel on its side, changing directions with little friction. It also helps to distribute stress evenly in the material by making the container more sphericalcitation needed.
Oak Barrel bistro has fine-dining aspirations in St. Charles County
Oak Barrel American Bistro in O'Fallon, Mo., hits the mark with its local, seasonal fare.
Barrel | Define Barrel at Dictionary.com
Barrel definition, a cylindrical wooden container with slightly bulging sides made of staves hooped together, and with flat, parallel ends. See more.
Casks used for ale or beer have shives and keystones in their openings. Before serving the beer a spile is hammered into the shive and a tap into the keystone.
The "chine hoop" is the iron hoop nearest the end of a wooden barrel, the "bilge hoops" those nearest the bulge, or centre.
The stopper used to seal the hole in a barrel is called the bung.
Used to describe the shape of one's torso.
Sizes
Main article: Barrel (unit)
A barrel is one of several units of volume, with dry barrels, fluid barrels (UK beer barrel, U.S. beer barrel), oil barrel, etc. The volume of some barrel units is double others, with various volumes in the range of about 100–200 litres (22–44 imp gal; 26–53 US gal).
English wine casks
English casks of wine11
gallon
rundlet
barrel
tierce
hogshead
firkin, puncheon, tertian
pipe, butt
tun
1
tun
1
2
pipes, butts
1
1 1⁄2
3
firkins, puncheons, tertians
1
1 1⁄3
2
4
hogsheads
1
1 1⁄2
2
3
6
tierces
1
1 1⁄3
2
2 2⁄3
4
8
barrels
1
1 3⁄4
2 1⁄3
3 1⁄2
4 2⁄3
7
14
rundlets
1
18
31 1⁄2
42
63
84
126
252
gallons (US/wine)
3.79
68.14
119.24
158.99
238.48
317.97
476.96
953.92
litres
1
15
26 1⁄4
35
52 1⁄2
70
105
210
gallons (imperial)
4.55
68.19
119.3
159.1
238.7
318.2
477.3
954.7
litres
Pre-1824 definitions continued to be used in the US, the wine gallon of 231 cubic inches being the standard gallon for liquids (the corn gallon of 268.8 cubic inches for solids). In Britain the wine gallon was replaced by the Imperial gallon. The tierce later became the petrol barrel. The tun was originally 256 gallons, which explains where the quarter, 8 bushels or 64 (wine) gallons, comes from.
Brewery casks
English casks of ale and beer12
gallon
firkin
kilderkin
barrel
hogshead
(butt)
(tun)
Year designated
1
tuns
1
1+3⁄4
butts
1
3
5+1⁄4
hogsheads
1
1+1⁄2
4+1⁄2
7+7⁄8
barrels
1
2
3
9
15+3⁄4
kilderkins
1
2
4
6
18
31+1⁄2
firkins
1
8
16
32
48
144
252
ale gallons (ale)
(1454)
= 4.62
= 36.97
= 73.94
= 147.88
= 221.82
= 665.44
= 1164.52
litres (ale)
1
9
18
36
54
162
283+1⁄2
ale gallons (beer)
= 4.62
= 41.59
= 83.18
= 166.36
= 249.54
= 748.62
= 1310.09
litres (beer)
1
8+1⁄2
17
34
51
ale gallons
1688
= 4.62
= 39.28
= 78.56
= 157.12
= 235.68
litres
1
9
18
36
54
ale gallons
1803
= 4.62
= 41.59
= 83.18
= 166.36
= 249.54
litres
1
9
18
36
54
imperial gallons
1824
= 4.55
= 40.91
= 81.83
= 163.66
= 245.49
litres
Anti-impeachment lawmakers 'threatened with zero pork barrel'
THE impeachment of Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez has begun to get dirty. An opposition lawmaker has claimed that a colleague allied with President Benigno Aquino III allegedly threatened other congressmen with zero priority development assistance fund (PDAF), also known as pork barrel funds, if they vote against or abstain from voting on the Ombudsman's impeachment. read more
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Although it is common to refer to draught beer containers of any size as barrels, in the UK this is strictly correct only if the container holds 36 imperial gallons. The terms "keg" and "cask" refer to containers of any size, the distinction being that kegs are used for beers intended to be served using external gas cylinders. Cask ales undergo part of their fermentation process in their containers, called casks.
Casks are available in several sizes, and it is common to refer to "a firkin" or "a kil" (kilderkin) instead of a cask.
The modern US beer barrel is 31 US gallons (116.34777 litres), half a gallon less than the traditional wine barrel. (26 U.S.C. §5051 [2])
See also
Weighting a Sherry barrel
Barrel (unit)
55 gallon drum
Drum (container)
Kegs
Cask ale
gun barrel
Wine barrels
References
^ Slate
^ [1]
^ What's In A Barrel of Oil?
^ Oak Barrels: French vs. American
^ "27 C.F.R. sec 5.22(b)(1)(i)". Ecfr.gpoaccess.gov. http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&sid=21224b7c634d83e0fa329bfd18bb85dc&rgn=div8&view=text&node=27:1.0.1.1.3.3.25.2&idno=27. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
^ "ASIL Insight: WTO Protections for Food Geographic Indications". http://www.asil.org/insights/insigh43.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
^ "Food and Drugs Act, Food and Drug Regulations (C.R.C., c. 870)". http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/F-27/C.R.C.-c.870/236939.html#Section-B.02.020. Retrieved 2007-01-23. dead link
^ "Cognac Barrels Critical for Cognac aging". http://blog.cognac-expert.com/oak-barrel-cask-cognac-age-limousin/. Retrieved 2011-02-06.
^ Dixon B. 2009. Animicules: The mystery of the warehouse stains. MICROBE 4(3): 104-105.
^ A History of Warfare - Keegan, John, Vintage 1993
^ http://www.sizes.com/units/barrel_wine.htm
^ http://www.sizes.com/units/barrel_alebeer.htm
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Barrels
Look up barrel or cask in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Online barrel conversions
Origin of "over a barrel"
Oil measurements and conversions
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (Eleventh ed.). Cambridge University Press.
19th Century Wooden Casks used Aboard Ships for Storing Water and Rum Ration (Grog)
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Oil up above $103 as UN authorizes Libya strikes
Oil prices rose above $103 a barrel Friday in Asia as traders worried the United Nation's authorization of military strikes against forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi could prolong the conflict and threaten oil exports.
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Jitters over N-power may keep oil prices above US$100
A POSSIBLE backlash against nuclear energy - in Japan and beyond - could keep oil prices above US$100 per barrel (RM304) after world oil prices plunged in the immediate aftermath of Japan's earthquake and tsunami.
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With their Grand Opening on Memorial Day Weekend, Barrel Oak Winery will be Northern Virginia's newest family winery. Owners and wine-makers Sharon and Brian Roeder, ...
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