The Corkscrew | Wine from French oak or American oak – what a difference a barrel can make
More than just containers for fermenting or ageing, the right barrel can add depth and character to a wine

To the average drinker, a barrel is a container that holds wine before it is bottled. But there’s much more to them than that.
Barrels come in all sizes and are named according to the region in which they are used. In Bordeaux, France, barrels go by the names barrique (225 litres) or tonneau (900 litres); the latter is usually used for long-term ageing, or vinification.
In Burgundy, they are called a pièce (208 litres for pinot noir) while Chablis winemakers use a feuillette (132 litres). Pièce is also the term used in Champagne but, there, it holds 500 litres. Cognac uses two barrel sizes – fût (350 litres) and pipe (600 litres). The Germans like their barrels on the larger side. In Mosel, a barrel is called a fuder (1,000 litres); in the Rhein, it’s known as a stück (1,200 litres).
The smaller the barrel the more oak influence it has, because a proportionately larger surface area of wood is in contact with the wine.

