This finishes really sweet and is designed to. I have made a ton of variants of this and still have 6 bottles left from my first batch that are now 2 years old. Adding raspberries to the recipe comes out awesome, and adding some cranberry juice can add some bitterness that reduces the sweetness. I have some 1 gallon batches from last year I need to bottle, I just have been too busy with school and work to get around to it.
The curse of the mead brewer is, I need to rack or bottle a bunch of stuff. The good thing is that time only helps mead. I have a 17% blueberry mead that has sat in the carboy for over a year I should rack and backsweeten soon.
How did this come out? I also used the sweet mead yeast but I used a little bit more honey. Hoping it doesn't get TOO sweet.
How long did you leave it in primary? The original post says to leave it in primary for two months but I'm a little nervous to do that with all the sediment in there.
I am not a mead person but the recipe was so simple, I figured why not?
I didn't keep good notes which is a shame since I am quite the opposite with brewing beer. I remember following the exact recipe except I used ground cinnamon so I lowered the amount from what the recipe calls for. I used bread yeast per the recipe.
Once the solids began to drop, maybe 3 months later, I simply dump the liquids, as gently as possible, into another, sanitized, jug. I did that 2 or 3 times until it seem clear.
15 months later and it is beautifully crystal clear. It tastes better now than it has before. It's difficult for me to describe the flavor since I've never had mead before. I had a sipped of hopped mead once and I simply did not like it. This, though, it tastes good, like I would imagine a honey drink would taste! Sorry for being so non-descriptive!
How did this come out? I also used the sweet mead yeast but I used a little bit more honey. Hoping it doesn't get TOO sweet.
How long did you leave it in primary? The original post says to leave it in primary for two months but I'm a little nervous to do that with all the sediment in there.
I updated this recipe and brewed it today.
Omit the raisins and crappy bread yeast.
use wyeast sweet mead yeast. just hand squeeze the orange, and take off the top zest.
steep for 10 minutes at 140F with the honey, then cool and strain it when you put it in the fermenter.
also use yeast nutrient and energizer. its not as 'ancient' but it should be a little nicer. no sourness from the rind to age out, and a cleaner yeast that's meant for alcohol, but only to 11%. so use a little less honey. 3lbs tops.
Also, I've been told that this recipe can be proportioned evenly to a 5 gallon batch, however, 5 teaspoons of yeast seems a bit much. Please offer your comments. Thank you.