First-Fill vs Refill Casks: Sensory Differences
The number of times a cask has been used dramatically affects the whisky's flavor profile.
What "Fill" Means
- **First-Fill:** Cask's first use for Scotch after its original content (bourbon, sherry, etc.)
- **Refill:** Second, third, or subsequent use for Scotch whisky
- **Rejuvenated:** Old cask scraped and re-charred to restore activity
Flavor Impact
### First-Fill Characteristics - **Bourbon casks:** Intense vanilla, coconut, caramel, butterscotch - **Sherry casks:** Rich dried fruit, chocolate, spice, deep color - **Wine casks:** Tannic grip, fruit notes, often purple/red hue - More aggressive wood influence (can overpower delicate spirit)
### Refill Characteristics - Subtler wood influence - Allows distillery character to shine - Gentler oxidation and mellowing - Preferred for complex, spirit-forward expressions
The Numbers
- First-fill bourbon: ~50% flavor from cask
- Second-fill: ~30% flavor from cask
- Third-fill+: ~10-20% flavor from cask
Quality Considerations
**First-fill is not always "better":** - Heavy sherry first-fill can mask spirit character - Refill casks essential for age statements (slower extraction prevents over-oaking) - Many premium expressions use refill for balance
Blending Applications
Master blenders use fill levels strategically: - First-fill for color and sweetness - Refill for depth and spirit expression - Combination creates complexity
Exam Relevance
When blind tasting, strong vanilla/coconut = likely first-fill bourbon. If spirit character dominates with subtle oak = refill cask.