MikeFlynn74 said:
ilikebeer
So wouldnt you think that alc content of the mead kill the botulisim?
clostridium botulinum (bacteria) produce ---> spores and toxin
----------------------------------
The alcohol may retard the growth of the botulinum bacteria. The yeast growing in the mead may out-compete this bacteria causing them to perish. However, the botulinum bacteria crawling around in your stomach is not what typically makes adults sick. It is typically the botulism toxin that makes adults sick.
The botulism can form botulism spores (think of what supermans parents put him in as a baby when they shipped him to earth). These spores are like a protective coating around hibernating bacteria. The covering protects them from everything but intense heat, acid, enzymes, and a few other things. At any time, bacteria can "hatch" From the spore and start growing again. Thus spores would be unaffected by the alcohol. The spores could infect infants (and perhaps adults) by "hatching" in the stomach or intestines after ingestion. Babies (and very rarely adults) do not have sufficient hazardous conditions in their digestive tracts to kill the spores.
Botulism bacteria can also produce produce botulism toxin (poison). This would be similar to cyanide or arsenic. Alcohol won't make this poison not poisoness (just as arsenic would still be poisoness if it was mixed with alcohol). The botulinum bacteria can produce the toxin and/or spores the honey before you even start to make mead.
The risk that there is botulism is in the honey is real, but VERY small. The risk that the bacteria is in the honey and has produced spores or toxin, also VERY small... but none the less real. It thus becomes a personal decision... because without expensive sophisticated biochemical technique, you won't know if there is botulism (bacteria, toxin, or spores) on that honey not.
*The best recommendation would be to avoid feeding honey (and mead or other honey containing products) to infants less than 1 year old. Whether you apply this to yourself, is a personal decision because the risk is substantially less for adults.