Why not measure it?I will put the last addition in at day 5 without meassuring.
Why not measure it?
It is important to degas your mead prior to adding the nutrients to avoid mead eruption accidents (MEAs). It is also helpful to siphon 1/2 cup of your must from the fermenter for dissolving the nutrients before adding them back to the mead.
Between the 24 hour mark and your last nutrient addition, degas and aerate your mead at least twice daily. Your last nutrient addition should occur at the 1/3 sugar break; that is, when one third of the total sugars you provided have been converted to alcohol, you no longer want to add nutrients or aerate your must (if your SG started at 1.120, the 1/3 break will be when your SG drops to 1.080 [dropped one third of 0.120]). At this point you would just degas (similar to aeration, but leave your fermenter capped).
I'd agree, from my general experience and reading about mixed fermentations.I'm still learning but it seems like daily gravity monitoring is the way to go. With mead, sanitation takes a back seat to making sure the yeast are happy
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Not a mead expert, but just my 2 cents from a microbiological standpoint.
Oh, I did not know that cbc 1 is a killer strain! I think you saved me from a bad batch of beerI'm still learning but it seems like daily gravity monitoring is the way to go.
With mead, sanitation takes a back seat to making sure the yeast are happy.
Most current protocols I read suggest degassing and aerating twice daily until the 1/3 sugar break.
https://www.meadmakr.com/meadmakr-guide/part-iii-the-basic-recipe/
I'm thinking for 1-gal batches people add back the sample pulled for gravity reading. Either siphon or just pour a sample after degassing and then add it back after (use the same sample to dissolve nutrients if applicable). I'd be comfortable doing this.
It also might be possible to put the hydrometer directly into the carboy. At high gravity it won't sink very far.
What spoilage microbes are concerning?
CBC-1 is a killer strain, so other Sacc contaminants aren't a problem, and probably can't compete with your pitch regardless.
Brett is too slow growing to cause a problem. Racking removes nutrients so it can't grow long-term.
Alcohol should kill the other wild yeast genera.
LAB will similarly be nutrient starved and will be slow growing in the low pH range typical of fermenting mead, especially at low cell count and relatively low temperature.
Other bacteria should be killed/inhibited by the combination of alcohol and pH.
Not a mead expert, but just my 2 cents from a microbiological standpoint.
You aren't the only one -- even the yeast labs don't yet tend to publish the K factors on their non-wine yeasts. I asked every lab at NHC2017 and none of their people knew if such a list even existed for beer yeasts (neither the marketing people nor the lab/biologists).Oh, I did not know that cbc 1 is a killer strain! I think you saved me from a bad batch of beer
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FWIW I would have done the same.but was my decision to combine the last three additions correct?
Ok, good to know.Step feeding and good SNAs always make the yeast blow past normal tolerances. Even 1388 will hit 20%! This is why I started adding all honey upfront. Yeast tend to stay around published tolerance if you do.
High ABV with be a bit hot from alcohol. I suggest aging on medium toast American oak for a few moths to mellow it out.
This thread is the BOMM.Thank you, thank you, thank you moderators for the sticky!
I "reported" this thread and asked for stickyfying it, as I was very tired of searching for it, each time I wanted to ask somethingThank you, thank you, thank you moderators for the sticky!
You'd get much better juice extraction if you mash, puree, or freeze the berries before adding them.Would the following process work?
Collecting the berries, squeezing them a bit, adding them to the mead, waiting till the fermentation that they kick off subsides, stepfeeding honey again till yeast gives up, letting it all settle out, bottle.
Everything done in primary, without racking and berries not in a bag.
You'd get much better juice extraction if you mash, puree, or freeze the berries before adding them.
I've added fresh blackberry puree to a cider in primary. Totally fine.
Just make sure there's enough space in your fermenter.
Are you planning to bottle directly from primary? That's something I never do.
FYI, both TOSNA and step feeding are known to allow yeast to go beyond the listed alcohol tolerance.