Sorry if this has been asked, has anyone made this without the orange? I'm allergic to citric acid and I don't know how I will handle fermented citrus.
So, being somewhat inquisitive I tried to look into why this recipe works. The orange, along with the peel, should be changing the pH of the 'wort' (what'cha call it for mead?) so that it is more favorable to the yeast.
The raisins appear to be the source of 'nutrients' that would be added to your more mainstream meads.
Finally, in the finished mead that orange 'pith' and just the ascorbic acid are adding some balance to what would be a very sweet drink.
So, from that, you'd probably want to look for a substitute that would play those roles? <shrug>
Mine isn't clearing and it's almost been two months...
So, being somewhat inquisitive I tried to look into why this recipe works. The orange, along with the peel, should be changing the pH of the 'wort' (what'cha call it for mead?) so that it is more favorable to the yeast.
The raisins appear to be the source of 'nutrients' that would be added to your more mainstream meads.
Finally, in the finished mead that orange 'pith' and just the ascorbic acid are adding some balance to what would be a very sweet drink.
So, from that, you'd probably want to look for a substitute that would play those roles? <shrug>
If that's the case, he could substitute any mild food acid for the citric and get the same effect in pH change, as long as he adjusts for the difference in strength.
Anyone try using a straight up Habanero in this? We managed to get a grand total of 1 (1!) pepper this year so in a misguided effort to save my pride I'm thinking about throwing it in a batch of JAOM for fun.
it's highly subjective. But I wouldn't do it - I love spices and spicy food, but for every beer with peppers that I enjoyed, there must be a dozen that I hated. Plus this mead will already have strong honey and citrus flavors, in addition to strong alcohol kick - making it also spicy is way too much, at least for my taste - too many contradicting, overpowering flavors that don't compliment each other. It's like a band where everyone is screaming different songs trying to outscream each other and all amps are set to 11.
Even though sometimes sweet and spicy mix well.
really? Has the fruit dropped?
This thread makes me wonder - the fruit drops as the alcohol level rises and overall density of fluid (specific gravity) drops. One could design some easily sanitizable, floating marbles of some sort, with densities/specific gravities, of say. 1.010, 1.015, 1020 etc.
Then you wouldn't need to take the sample out of the carboy at all and use hydrometer - just watch the marbles float at the top, and as they sink one by one, you would know the density dropped below that level. Should be easy enough to do, it's basically like little hydrometers with different specific gravities. How come nobody makes those?
This is the principle upon which the Galileo thermometer works. The problem is, as with the thermometer, the temperature of your mead will affect the accuracy of the balls. Just like your run of the mill hydrometer, if it's not at the calibration temperature, the readings will be off.
It stopped fermenting several weeks ago... I didn't use any orange, only raisins... about half of them are still floating.really? Has the fruit dropped?
This thread makes me wonder - the fruit drops as the alcohol level rises and overall density of fluid (specific gravity) drops. One could design some easily sanitizable, floating marbles of some sort, with densities/specific gravities, of say. 1.010, 1.015, 1020 etc.
Then you wouldn't need to take the sample out of the carboy at all and use hydrometer - just watch the marbles float at the top, and as they sink one by one, you would know the density dropped below that level. Should be easy enough to do, it's basically like little hydrometers with different specific gravities. How come nobody makes those?
It stopped fermenting several weeks ago... I didn't use any orange, only raisins... about half of them are still floating.
No activity in the air lock...how do you know it stopped fermenting?
No activity in the air lock...
within the normal lager-ale fermentation temperature the density of water does not change much with temperature - it drops about 0.4% from 5C to 30C.
You need to correct for thermal expansion when temperature is high - like well above >100F, below 80F it's fairly flat.
Anyone try using a straight up Habanero in this? We managed to get a grand total of 1 (1!) pepper this year so in a misguided effort to save my pride I'm thinking about throwing it in a batch of JAOM for fun.
I threw this mess together yesterday. Will be updating how it goes.
I'm expecting a very noticeable difference in this batch. The pepper was super small and I decided against keeping the seeds in.
Time will tell.
Does my JAOM have mold growing in the neck of my carboy or was this just some yeast that never made it into the must? Everything was properly sanitized with Star San. As of today, this has been fermenting away for 36 days (I started it on July 28th).
![]()
![]()
![]()
looks suspicious. Is it on the mead surface? did you shake it well before fermentation started?
Can you try to carefully wipe and then maybe clean it with star-san soaked tissue?
Does my JAOM have mold growing in the neck of my carboy or was this just some yeast that never made it into the must? Everything was properly sanitized with Star San. As of today, this has been fermenting away for 36 days (I started it on July 28th).
Just picked up some 5l glass jugs with bung and airlocks. Would like to try this soon. I tried to skim thru and see if there were any other suggestions for a substitute for the bread yeast. Is that what most of you are doing? Are there any other readily available dry yeasts that would help make this a little less sweet? I'm not sure I want to make a trip back to the brew store for $7 Wyeast/White Labs.