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first quick mead: advice?

Discussion in 'Mead Forum' started by Zebra, Jun 9, 2009.

 

  1. #1
    Zebra

    Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    Hi, I'm brewing my first couple batches of mead right now to experiment and see how they go. The first is a gallon of a recipe that should be ready to try in about a month.
    The second is following this recipe (for 1/2 gallon):
    It will have been in it's first fermenter 48 hours tonight, but it looks like there still quite a bit of activity going on in there (I'm using a champagne yeast). I suppose it can't hurt to leave it in there a few more days, but are there any visible cues to when fermentation has slowed? I'm using bare bones equipment right now, so visual cues is about all I have to go by right now.

    Thanks
     
  2. #2
    jesse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    nothing quick about mead. Time makes it. I used to always try to make a fast mead and was never impressed. I did however put a few bottles away after every brew. Kick myself in the ass after every sip for drinking the rest. I'd say quick is 9-12 months. Let it age at least 2 years...It's worth it.
     
  3. #3
    Zebra

    Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    I filtered out about a spoonful to see how it's going. I must say, I like the taste a lot. Spicy, a bit bubbly, and mildly sweet. I can't taste any alcohol, so I'm guessing it's 5% tops right now. It could use to ferment more, but it's coming out more like a cider than a wine, which is what I'd expect. I'm pretty optimistic about this recipe.
     
  4. #4
    Brandon O

    Knapsnatchio  

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    The fermentation will take 1-2 months. Then you ought rack it to a secondary for about 10 more months and let it degass.
     
  5. #5
    Clayton

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    the only thing you can do. and it will help ALOT.
    is to add lots of FAN and yeast nutrient
     
  6. #6
    dudasaj

    Dude  

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    Don't boil honey. Don't do an extended simmer. I'd say steer clear of any temps over 160F.
     
  7. #7
    travestyofnature

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 9, 2009
    +5 on not boiling the honey. It ruins the aeromatics and IO the flavor of the honey. If you like how it tastes now, you would love it if you didn't boil.
     
  8. #8
    Zebra

    Member

    Posted Jun 17, 2009
    I decided to let it ferment a while longer, but I realized that I should have stuck to the recipe. The yeast seems to have fermented most of the honey and now it's no longer sweet. It obviously needs to age a little now. If I had siphoned it after a few days rather than 10, it would have been modestly alcoholic and drinkable.

    I'm starting to think that the two paths for making a mead this fast are to produce something that is tasty and not very alcoholic, or something of conventional alcohol levels but not very tasty.

    My other batch is coming along nicely, though.
     
  9. #9
    Wade E

    Beer Buster

    Posted Jun 17, 2009
    Wine yeast will almost always ferment dry so if youre looking for sweeter the use a sweet mead yeast or add sulfites and sorbate when its done fermenting and sweeten it up with a simple syrup consisting of 2 parts sugar dissolved in 1 part boiling water and let it cool and add it into the wine(mead) or you can even use honey in this case to sweeten it. Do not boil honey!
     
  10. #10
    Zebra

    Member

    Posted Jun 23, 2009
    Understood. I have a new batch that's following this recipe (essentially). I siphoned it into bottles after 5 days this time, while it's still sweet. Hopefully the champagne yeast won't eat all my sugar this time.

    On the topic of siphoning, what ways do you guys filter out the stuff during the bottling process?
     
  11. #11
    wayneb

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jun 23, 2009
    I'm a traditionalist, so I'll wait until all the cloudy stuff settles to the bottom of a carboy, and then I'll rack (siphon) the clear liquid off of the top into another carboy for further clearing, or then into bottles. Lots of folks like to speed up the process by adding a fining agent (like bentonite or sparkolloid), and still others with the $$ available to do it, will use a commercial wine filter when they bottle.
     
  12. #12
    Ferrousity

    Active Member

    Posted Jun 24, 2009
    putting it in bottles after only 5 days is not going to stop the yeast from eating the sugars, but it may (at best) give you VERY carbonated stuff that tastes just like your first batch did after the fermentation was complete, or (at worst) shower your storage location with glass and alcohol when the bottles explode
     
  13. #13
    Zebra

    Member

    Posted Jun 24, 2009
    I was thinking somebody would say that, but we'll see. I have the bottles in the fridge and I'm periodically relieving pressure. What I really need I suppose is some potassium sorbate.
     
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