sharpstick
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2007
- Messages
- 177
- Reaction score
- 9
I finally bottled my JOAM made with blood oranges after 5 months in the primary (kinda forgot about it), and I have to say it is definitely not what I expected. The smell is overpowering from the cloves, cinnamon and nutmeg, and not in a good way. The small sip I took was also overpowered from the spice and way way too sweet. I also wish I had racked this to a secondary as it is impossible to go from the gallon jug to a bottling bucket and not disturb the sediment, it was crystal clear but now its murkier then a hefeweizen. I had followed the original directions to a tee, however I guess it just didn't turn out too well for me. I think Im going to forget about these bottles under my bed for a few years and see how it turns out then.
i've left JOAM batches for that long or longer.
I think spices are a personal thing. We've been putting way more than the recipe calls for. Judges have called it too much, but we like it so PPTTTHH to the judges!
loose sediment is the main drawback of bread yeast. the slightest movement creates clouds of yeast. when i think about bottling, i move the carboy to the kitchen counter about a week ahead of time and let it settle on its own. i've occasionally racked to another carboy first, but usually just bottle carefully. i use an autosiphon and spring loaded bottling wand.
JOAM gets better with age, but is usually drinkable immediately after bottling. if some elements are too strong, you can always save it to blend with something else that is weak in that area.
the original JOAM recipe tends to be too sweet for me, so i cut back the honey a bit, to about 3 lbs, and add more spices, craisins and cayenne pepper to balance the sweet mouthfeel.