Here's a generic recipe to show the ingredients
and techniques involved. Meads like this are often called
"Traditional Meads," though most of the older mead recipes
I know of do call for various flavoring agents. In any case,
this is a recipe that should get you started making good quality
meads. Note that an unflavored mead really gives a delicate
honey the chance to show itself off. It can also remind wine
drinkers of a delicate, but slightly sweet, Chenin Blanc.
15-18 lbs. Clover Honey (or other light delicate honey)
5 gallons Water
2 oz. "The Beverage People" Yeast Nutrient for Mead
5 tsp. Stock Sodium Bisulfite solution (after fermentation)
5 Tbl. Tartaric Acid
1/2 tsp. Irish Moss
25-30 ml. Liquid Oak Essence (optional)
10 grams Prise de Mousse Wine Yeast
Original Brix: 21-25%
Total Acid: 0.60 - 0.65%
Follow this method for any of the recipes provided:
- Heat the Water until warm, turn off the stove and stir
in the Honey until dissolved.
- Heat this mixture to boiling, and boil for 5 minutes,
skimming the surface with a large spoon. Add the Nutrient,
Acid, and Irish Moss.
- Cool to room temperature.
- Pour the mixture into carboys, or other narrow-neck (closed)
fermentors, filling them no more than 75% full.
- When the temperature of this "must" is down near room
temperature, test the sugar and acid levels. If these are
below the levels indicated above, make the necessary corrections.
Slightly higher is okay.
- Add Yeast to the surface. In 10 or 12 hours, stir it in.
- Once fermentation begins, allow it to continue for two
or three weeks until visible signs of fermentation have
ceased.
- When bubbles can no longer be seen rising through the
mead, rack (siphon) away from the settlings into an open
container. Fine with Sparkolloid, add a teaspoon per gallon
of stock Sodium Bisulfite solution (and Oak Essence if desired),
and siphon into a narrowneck storage container, top up,
and let it set for four weeks.
- Rack away from the Sparkolloid settlings, top up again,
and let it stand for three to six months.
- Carefully rack into an open container, add 1 1/2 teaspoons
stock Sodium Bisulfite solution per gallon. If you wish
to sweeten the mead, do so now with sugar syrup, adding
also 1/2 teaspoon Wine Stabilizer per gallon.
- Siphon the mead into bottles, cap them, and set them aside
to age for three to six months.
Meads flavored with various fruits or berries are traditionally
called "Melomels." These meads are extremely common, and as
you might expect, almost any imaginable variation is possible.
One of my favorites is made with raspberries. This is what
the recipe looks like:
Raspberry Mead (5 gallons)
12 lbs. Raspberry Honey (or other light delicate honey)
15 lbs. Raspberries (fresh or frozen)
4 1/2 gallons Water
2 oz. "The Beverage People" Yeast Nutrient for Mead
5 tsp. Stock Sodium Bisulfite solution (after fermentation)
4 Tbl. Tartaric Acid
1/2 oz. Pectic Enzyme
1/2 tsp. Irish Moss
1 1/2 tsp. Tannin
10 grams Prise de Mousse Wine Yeast
Original Brix: 23-24%
Total Acid: 0.65 - .070%
Notes on the Melomel Variation
Prepare as for Unflavored Mead with the following exceptions:
- Add Tannin during the boil.
- Add Berries and Pectic Enzyme after cooling, along with
the yeast.
- Fruit or Berries should be tied up in a large nylon straining
bag, and lightly smashed before being combined with the
rest of the batch.
- Stone Fruits such as: plums, cherries, etc. can be substituted
for a different fruit flavor but must be pitted before use.
- With fruit or berry pulp present, fermentation must take
place in a wide mouth container such as a 10 gallon plastic
primary fermentor. (I use the stainless kettle I've been
using for the boil). The pulp will rise to the top during
fermentation, and should be pushed down into the liquid
morning and night for four to six days. At this point, the
pulp is lightly squeezed and removed. When the active signs
of fermentation, bubbling and frothing have stopped, rack
to a closed secondary container such as a 5 or 6 gallon
carboy, and proceed with the rest of the steps.
Metheglins, or "spiced meads" are common in meadmaking. A wide
variety of herbs and spices can be used. Here's a recipe for
one of the most popular versions, "ginger mead." Ginger Metheglin
(5 gallons)
15 lbs. "Meadmakers Magic" Canadian Clover Honey
5 gallons Water
6 Tablespoons Tartaric Acid
2 oz. "The Beverage People" Yeast Nutrient for Meads
Grated Ginger Root Tea (added to taste after fermentation)
5 tsp. Stock Sodium Bisulfite solution (after fermentation)
1 oz. Sparkolloid
10 grams Prise de Mousse Wine Yeast
Starting Brix 25
Total Acidity 0.60- 0.65%
Prepare as for Unflavored Mead with the following exceptions:
- After fermentation (but before fining) boil 8 oz. Grated
Ginger Root in about a quart of water for about 15 minutes
to make a tea.
- Remove the Ginger root, and stir the tea into the mead,
adding it to taste.
It is easy to convert a Metheglin into a Braggot. Simply take
away about six pounds of the Honey, and substitute an equal
amount of Malt Extract Syrup or five pounds of Dried Malt Extract,
adding it at the same time as you add the Honey. Voila! This
recipe will now make a Ginger Braggot. Another really
interesting change from still mead, is to make it sparkling.
Bottled in Champagne bottles, and dosed with a priming sugar
mix, the bottle fermentation will leave a yeast sediment,
so pour off slowly to leave it behind. The effervescence is
especially refreshing with the fruit meads.
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