Archive for the ‘Mead Recipes’ Category

Prison Mead Batch 2 Verdict by Nazgul

Monday, June 14th, 2010

I’m pleased to report that unlike the utter foulness of the manuka mead, the second batch of Prison Mead has turned out quite drinkable indeed.  This 3 gallon batch was made with unpasteurized wildflower honey and off-the-shelf Fleishman’s yeast.  I think of it as a proof-of-concept experiment.

From ferment to glass in three months means that while it’s certainly on the “aggressive” side, it nevertheless is still quite drinkable.  While the nose is a bit on the “clear your sinuses” meter, the taste is surprisingly mild and very sweet.  It’s almost like a fruit wine in it’s character.   There was no finishers or clarifier used so of course it’s on the hazy side, but in many ways this is speculative archeo-brewing.  This mead is probably very close in colour and taste to what ancient peoples would have been preparing.

I’m considering this a success, which means that for the small-scale home experiments I’ll be on to something different next.  I think next up will be some recipes I’ve been reading for Short Mead, which has an even quicker ferment-to-table time than this three-month mead.

All in all, good times.

Prison Mead Batch 1: Verdict by Nazgul

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

This past Friday it was the 3 month mark for the first batch of Prison Mead.  Unfortuantely, it looks a bit of a bust.

While the fermentation was just fine and everything went as it should, it seems that the manuka honey just isn’t suited for mead making — there are nasty flavor compounds that developed.  What starts as a nice dark caramel-like taste in the original honey, translates into a bitter and oddly plastic taste in the ferment.  Not good at all.  Perhaps there are some hillbillies somewhere that would like to get drunk off of it, but not me.  I’m going to take just one bottle from it and dump the rest.

Happily, it’s not all bad news.  The second batch which will be coming to maturity next month is tasting very good.  This was made with simple wildflower honey, and has developed a very mild and sweet taste.

This was always a big experiment, so now we know: manuka honey is fit for toast, not mead.

Prison Mead Update, April 22, 2010 by Nazgul

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

It’s been a while since I chimed in on the progress of the Prison Mead.  To recap:

There are two batches on the go.  The first batch made with manuka honey which was started in February, and a second batch put up in March when the first batch was racked, using regular wildflower honey.

Both batches are coming along well.  I just taste-sampled both of them for comparison, and they’re both going to be very drinkable.  The manuka batch is considerably mellower than the wildflower, which really shows what even a little aging will accomplish.  Most notable was the one gallon of manuka mead that I grated some nutmeg in.  I wasn’t sure it was really going to come through as I didn’t want to overdo it and only used a half teaspoon (freshly grated of course), but there definitely is a pronounced nutmeg hint.  It’s a very nice note and I think this may become an annual Yule mead.

This weekend I’m planning on racking the wildflower batch and filtering the manuka batch to prepare for final aging, so more updates anon.

Sunday Meadening! by nocturnalia

Monday, March 29th, 2010

So, we finally got a chance to lay down three carboys of mead yesterday; it’s been literally months as we slowly accrued the yeast, filters, honey… but finally!

The first carboy, our chubby little plastic 20L, has purple loosestrife honey with an ale yeast in it. Weed mead! As an experiment, we also tossed in a handful of sterilized oak ageing chips. I can’t wait to see how the tannins work into the mead.

The second carboy, a standard glass has a truly delicious blueberry honey, with the classic EC-1118 champagne yeast. I’m hoping this one will really pack a punch when it’s done.

The third carboy belongs to one of our friends. He did things a bit differently- double the honey, with extra yeast food added. Needless to say, those are some happy yeasts and things are already bubbling along there.

all three of the carboys had distilled water in them. This is our preferred water, as it has no wild yeast, minerals or other contaminants to skew the reaction. Just pure H20.

After we got everything going, we sat down to a celebratory dinner of late night chili and, yes, a jug of mead from our last batch. Delicious.
now the hard part- waiting.

Valgarth’s Mead Recipe by Valgarth

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Okay, I like mead. Just plain old mead. You can add flavours, herbs and spices, fruit or fruit pulp and a whole host of other interesting stuff to make varieties and variants of mead like braggot, cyser, melomel, metheglin, pyment and sack mead, but that’s an advanced class (ok, not really all that advanced since mostly you just throw stuff into the mead and see what happens) and not what I’m writing about today. Here’s how I make a simple mead.

(more…)

All’s clear in lockdown! by Nazgul

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Upon careful observation I noted that there was bubbling just as vigorous in the two floppy-balloon’d gallons as in the good one, so I determined that there was no need to apply the electrodes to the yeast in the hopes of bringing them back from the dead.  The hole in the balloons was simply too large and letting out too much gas.

Balloons replaced, and now all is well in the yeastheim.  Full steam ahead.

Prison Mead — Trouble in Cell Block C by Nazgul

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Upon returning from the gang meading last night, I observed that two of the three new batches of Prison Mead seemed to have extremely lethargic yeast .  One was foaming and filling it’s baloon just fine, but the other two were limp noodles.  There was some bubbling, but not much foam action.  Gave them a good shake but this morning they were still flatlined.

Just a bad batch of yeast I suspect.  Going to pitch another lot and toss it in later today and see if that livens up the party.  More anon.

Weekend Meading Part 1: Prison mead by Nazgul

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

The weekend of much meading has begun.  The last balloon on the first batch of prison mead finally deflated, so I headed out today to the local grocery store to grab three more bottles to rack the mead into, originally planning to just discard the water and use the bottles.  While I was there it turns out there was a shipment of unpasteurized wildflower honey in 1 pound measures, so I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to rack the first batch and then put up a second batch.

In racking the first batch I tasted a bit, and I’m happy to say it actually isn’t bad even at this early stage.  Obviously it’s still cloudy and raw, but it clearly is going to develop into something quite drinkable.  The goal of this process of course is to have a steady supply of drinkable mead to hand, which may not be the highest quality or the most interesting character, but will still do the job and not taste awful.  It looks like it’s well on the way.

For the new batch I followed essentially the same recipe as before, but I used a bit more honey this time as it was just basic wildflower honey and not the super-rich manuka honey I used on the first go.   Thanks to my lovely wife and Bert the Viking Cat for their help.

Tomorrow, the council gathers for a gang-brew-up.  We have a good supply of unprocessed 100% organic honey and all the equipment lined up.  Should be a good one.

Prison Mead: Week 1 by Nazgul

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

At the one week mark all three gallons of Prison Mead are coming along nicely.  The balloons are still maintaining an even fill and the bubbles are still rolling along, indicating that the yeast is still doing it’s yeasty thing.  The must is a lovely amber colour, and over the next couple of weeks should start clearing as the yeast finishes it’s job and shuffles off this mortal coil.  Not much point in taking a photo since there’s nothing new to see, but in this case that’s good news.

Prison Mead Update #1 by Nazgul

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Everything is proceeding nicely with the Prison Mead.  After leaving it out to keep an eye on it for 48 hours I’ve put the bottles in a bin for under-kitchen-table storage.  The balloons are maintaining a nice seal and even gas fill, indicating the vent hole is the perfect size.  The bubbles are convecting up as befits a happy yeast colony, and the layer of honey that was sitting at the bottom has been entirely dissolved.

Looking very promising for cheap and easy mead.