Quote:
Originally Posted by turtlescales
Mead is just yeast, water, and honey. Anything else is up to you. Make sure everything is quite sterilized though. The amount of honey you use will determine sweetness... about 2.5 pounds for dry, 3 pounds for a medium sweet, and 4 will get you something quite sweet, or with a high ABV depending on the champagne yeast you use.
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Most of us put in nutrients to help the yeast. But you couldn't get simpler. Just warm the water, mix honey, stir well to put some oxygen in, then take a temp reading, if under they yeast tollerance, usually around 98 degrees, then toss in the yeast.
I like taking powdered yeast into a plastic cup with a bit of room temp water and just a squirt of fruit juice or a touch of sugar mixed in and let sit for a few minutes. That way you can get the yeast ready and make sure your yeast is alive. It should foam up a bit. This is what I am doing while the rest is cooling a bit more. Then just toss the yeast in, give a good stir, and put in your ferment container with an airlock.
Check back in a month to see if bubbling has slowed, if so, rack to another contaner and then let sit for 5-6 months or so until clear. Then either bottle or rack again, Then forget about it for about 8 months. That's aging. Then done.
Mead is really the easiest fermentation out there. You can get more complicated from there but that is a choice. Lazyness rules here.
Only thing not to be lazy on is sanitizing your gear before using it. Then your's good.
Matrix