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Wayne 19-11-2007 10:26 AM

I need a recipe
 
I have about 10 years of homebrewine experience. I've made both wine and
beer. I've used kits, concentrates, and I also enjoy doing full mash
brewing. I guess I mention this to avoid the "keep everything clean and
sanitized....." posts.

I've only maid one mead. It was a straight mead, with just a little bit of
apple juice and some nutrients added to aid the fermentation. The stuff was
like rocket fuel. The alcohol content worked out to be just above 12%, but
the phenols where sky high. The stuff cleaned all the mucous from my mouth
and throat. Sometimes, the first taste was ok, but the second wasn't
pleasant at all. I would sample a bottle of this occasionally over the
course of several years and it never mellowed out.

I'm not sure what was wrong with that first batch, it didn't taste infected,
and was a very nice clear straw color. I used store bought honey that came
in five pound containers.

Anyway, now I'm a beekeeper and I happen to have several pounds of honey
that I can play with. It's a wonderful wildflower honey and I would love to
make a mead that will show off the full flavor. I'd like a wine strength,
still mead recipe that has a proven success record. I've browsed the net
and I'm tired of the recipes that give a list of ingredients and then state
"this is going to be great!" at the end. Know what I mean?

Anyone on this list have a proven recipe?

I'm going to cross post this to the meadmaking group too.

Thanks,

Wayne



Joe Sallustio 20-11-2007 01:04 PM

I need a recipe
 
On Nov 19, 5:26 am, "Wayne" > wrote:
> I have about 10 years of homebrewine experience. I've made both wine and
> beer. I've used kits, concentrates, and I also enjoy doing full mash
> brewing. I guess I mention this to avoid the "keep everything clean and
> sanitized....." posts.
>
> I've only maid one mead. It was a straight mead, with just a little bit of
> apple juice and some nutrients added to aid the fermentation. The stuff was
> like rocket fuel. The alcohol content worked out to be just above 12%, but
> the phenols where sky high. The stuff cleaned all the mucous from my mouth
> and throat. Sometimes, the first taste was ok, but the second wasn't
> pleasant at all. I would sample a bottle of this occasionally over the
> course of several years and it never mellowed out.
>
> I'm not sure what was wrong with that first batch, it didn't taste infected,
> and was a very nice clear straw color. I used store bought honey that came
> in five pound containers.
>
> Anyway, now I'm a beekeeper and I happen to have several pounds of honey
> that I can play with. It's a wonderful wildflower honey and I would love to
> make a mead that will show off the full flavor. I'd like a wine strength,
> still mead recipe that has a proven success record. I've browsed the net
> and I'm tired of the recipes that give a list of ingredients and then state
> "this is going to be great!" at the end. Know what I mean?
>
> Anyone on this list have a proven recipe?
>
> I'm going to cross post this to the meadmaking group too.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Wayne


I'm sure you will get better responses out of the meadmaking newsgroup
but it really is all relative. I make meads and I really can't say
any of mine are dynamite but we like them.

My advice would be lean toward lower alcohols in the 10% range to
avoid the heat if you like dry wines. Maybe consider around 10 pounds
per 5 gallons but use the hydrometer as a guide. Ferment warm and
use nutrient at close to maximum levels, my wildflower meads ferment
much slower than wines. I would ferment no lower than 70 F
personally. I used to add lemon juice to increase the acid but I'm
probably going to either not do that or cut it back to 1 lemon per 2
pounds of honey or less. If you measure the pH of honey water must it
will look ridiculously high in pH but that changes during fermentation
toward the low 3's so is not a reason for concern.

If you like citrus consider using lemon peel but be very carelul not
to get any pith in there; I made that mistake once and it's
unrecoverable.



Joe

Wayne 23-11-2007 12:37 PM

I need a recipe
 
Thanks for your help!

"Joe Sallustio" > wrote in message
...
> On Nov 19, 5:26 am, "Wayne" > wrote:
>> I have about 10 years of homebrewine experience. I've made both wine and
>> beer. I've used kits, concentrates, and I also enjoy doing full mash
>> brewing. I guess I mention this to avoid the "keep everything clean and
>> sanitized....." posts.
>>
>> I've only maid one mead. It was a straight mead, with just a little bit
>> of
>> apple juice and some nutrients added to aid the fermentation. The stuff
>> was
>> like rocket fuel. The alcohol content worked out to be just above 12%,
>> but
>> the phenols where sky high. The stuff cleaned all the mucous from my
>> mouth
>> and throat. Sometimes, the first taste was ok, but the second wasn't
>> pleasant at all. I would sample a bottle of this occasionally over the
>> course of several years and it never mellowed out.
>>
>> I'm not sure what was wrong with that first batch, it didn't taste
>> infected,
>> and was a very nice clear straw color. I used store bought honey that
>> came
>> in five pound containers.
>>
>> Anyway, now I'm a beekeeper and I happen to have several pounds of honey
>> that I can play with. It's a wonderful wildflower honey and I would love
>> to
>> make a mead that will show off the full flavor. I'd like a wine
>> strength,
>> still mead recipe that has a proven success record. I've browsed the net
>> and I'm tired of the recipes that give a list of ingredients and then
>> state
>> "this is going to be great!" at the end. Know what I mean?
>>
>> Anyone on this list have a proven recipe?
>>
>> I'm going to cross post this to the meadmaking group too.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Wayne

>
> I'm sure you will get better responses out of the meadmaking newsgroup
> but it really is all relative. I make meads and I really can't say
> any of mine are dynamite but we like them.
>
> My advice would be lean toward lower alcohols in the 10% range to
> avoid the heat if you like dry wines. Maybe consider around 10 pounds
> per 5 gallons but use the hydrometer as a guide. Ferment warm and
> use nutrient at close to maximum levels, my wildflower meads ferment
> much slower than wines. I would ferment no lower than 70 F
> personally. I used to add lemon juice to increase the acid but I'm
> probably going to either not do that or cut it back to 1 lemon per 2
> pounds of honey or less. If you measure the pH of honey water must it
> will look ridiculously high in pH but that changes during fermentation
> toward the low 3's so is not a reason for concern.
>
> If you like citrus consider using lemon peel but be very carelul not
> to get any pith in there; I made that mistake once and it's
> unrecoverable.
>
>
>
> Joe





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