i know this is sacrilege, but i made this, and let it age a year. i tricked a couple of people into helping me drinking some, and we poured the rest out
Why did you pour it out? I thought this stuff aged really well?
i know this is sacrilege, but i made this, and let it age a year. i tricked a couple of people into helping me drinking some, and we poured the rest out
still tasted like gasoline to me, and i couldn't wait another 2-3 years for the fermenter to be available again
So, tomorrow will be three weeks in the fermenter, and my mead has almost clearly completely. Also the airlock is slowed down to the point of almost no activity; maybe a bubble every minute or two. Should I bottle it already, since it has cleared, or wait another month?
Friday will be one month in the primary, and no joke, its almost done. All of the fruit has fallen to the bottom in one of my fermenters and half has on the other. I pulled a sample to see how it was, and damn that stuff is tasty. No bitter pithy taste; just orangy, slightly alcoholic honey wine. When all the fruit has dropped from the second gallon jug, I'm going to secondary them for a month to let any leftover yeast settle out before I bottle. This is competition-level mead. Thx!
My AOM is 2 weeks old now, and I'm NOT getting the wonderful aroma that everyone speaks of.
It bubbled like crazy for a couple days, then it stopped, no real evidence that the fermenting is still going on. Is this the problem? Followed recipe to a T.
Anyone ever
make this with US-O5 yeast? And if so how was it?
Anyone know if it's a good idea to filter the liquid into another plastic container? Cause I don't want to drink the oranges and raisins later on. Or should I just wait until it's done and then filter in to smaller cans or whatever?
just wait until it clears on it's own. if it isn't clear, it probably isn't done. my latest batch cleared in less than two months, but I usually let it sit in the carboy for 4 to 6 months before bottling.
when it is ready to bottle, i carefully carry it to the kitchen counter and cover with a dark towel for several days. this lets the yeast settle back down. the main drawback of bread yeast is that it doesn't floculate very well and clouds of lees swirl up.
i then use an autosiphon (with a carpenters spring clamp to hold the bottom just below the floating debris level) to bottle.
using a different yeast may be an interesting experiment, but puts it out of this forum thread. i've tried it with limited success, but do let us know how it works for you. joe put a lot of work into developing this recipe and stressed that you shouldn't deviate too far from it to be successful.
Anyone ever
make this with US-O5 yeast? And if so how was it?