cincybrewer
Well-Known Member
Thanks. I'll probably just plan on bottling it like a regular beer....I may look into a corker but then I guess I'd have to buy cork, and I hear that's pretty expensive.
Currants are berries, whereas raisins are grapes.
1. Cloves are given as a 1 per gallon standard in this recipe. I believe this issue was briefly touched on a while back - some people do 3 or 4 to play it safe, but I've never heard reports from a 5 in a 5 gallon batch.
2. Raisins vs. currants? I believe currants are a raisin variant, I forsee no problems. But why not just get more raisins if you're going to make a 5-gallon leap?
3. The no-racking policy is to maintain the 'Ancient' aspect - and keep people from expecting a 'fine mead' from this. Personally I do rack to secondary, let it sit for a while - and also do clearing racks after that before I bottle. Everyone can appreciate a clear mead.
I've made a few JAOM's - and honestly, while the clove is present, it isn't screaming CLOVE in your face. It's definitely a metheglin, no doubt, but one in a one gallon batch is pretty balanced with the orange.
This is the picture of my mead today and I started it yesterday 6/4/2012. Do I need to dump this batch or just pitch some bread yeast and hope for the best?
Qwancow said:This is my first attempt at brewing ever. So I followed the recipe pretty much exactly but instead of using the bread yeast I used the Wyeast sweet mead and I just don't know what I am looking for. This is the picture of my mead today and I started it yesterday 6/4/2012. Do I need to dump this batch or just pitch some bread yeast and hope for the best? Any help would be much appreciated!
Thank you!!!
Thanks for the help guys, I am still watching it and its starting to bubble a little. What should my air lock look like exactly?
NineMilBill said:This batch is less than 24 hours old and you're already asking if you should dump it? Never never never never say that again..