I have read this entire thread over the last week -- a lot of good info here, thanks. Now I have my questions.....
cozmogeek - you stated the following:
Do you have details of this batch (OG,FG, did you backsweeten, carbonate...)?
I like my wines sweet and do not like the taste of beer at all - I am wanting to try this recipe, but have some questions in my mind on how exactly I want to proceed. Your batch sounds like what I am looking for so any brew- notes you have will help me.
LoR - Thanks for your efforts and knowledge.
In the thread a couple times you referenced higher OGs than ~1.1 -- To do the sweeter mead can I start at these higher OGs, or will the yeast just adapt and make a higher ABV% and still end up dry? Am I better to plan on fermenting dry, then back sweetening to be sure? (Note: I really don't want to step feed at this point as I am not looking to increase ABV, just residual sugars)
I would like to experiment with the carbonation tablets - but don't know a lot about them. For anyone that has used them - Am I able to use K-Meta/Sorbate to halt fermentation and still use the tablets, or will the Sorbate counteract the tablet? Am I better to just klear/cold crash then rack and bottle with tablet not using the chemicals?
At some point in the future, I would like to do experiments with fruits.... I have only done wines where I have placed the fruit into the primary and I am looking to get a more direct/controlled fruit flavor. I am thinking I could make a BOMM and then rack onto the fruit for a week or two -- am I thinking on the correct lines, or is there a better way?
Thank Everyone for their time and knowledge.
For your sweet mead question, you can either max out ABV tolerance or stabilize as you suggest. Here is a post of rules I use for Wyeast 1388:
BOMM Gravity and Nutrient Update
After much research (tasty research), I've established some guidelines for Wyeast 1388 to make mead making easier/faster (read "I got sick of step feeding).
It seems Wyeast 1388 alcohol tolerance in mead is 15.7-16% ABV. Using this knowledge, I've been adding more and more honey upfront to see if the yeast would remain clean. I'm very happy to say that it does. Below is a chart of starting gravities and where Wyeast 1388 will stop. Keep in mind it's alway plus or minus a few points.
Original Gravity -> Finish Gravity
1.120 or less -> 1.000
1.130 -> 1.010
1.140 -> 1.020
1.150. -> 1.030
If you add more honey upfront, you need to adjust your nutrient timing. Since 1388 eats through 120 points, it's always subtraction of 40 points per addition. See chart below:
Nutrient Addition Timing Adjustments
1.120 - Add upfront, 1.080 & 1.040.
1.130 - Add upfront, 1.090 & 1.050.
1.140 - Add upfront, 1.100 & 1.060.
1.150 - Add upfront, 1.110 & 1.070.
Same amount of nutrients per standard recipe, just different gravity addition times.
Hope that helps others. I know I've enjoyed this!
For your fruit question,you can add either upfront or rack in fruit after fermentation. Or both if you want a fruit blast. It yields different flavors depending when you add fruit. Experiment!