treacheroustexan
Well-Known Member
If you made one gallon, that is perfect/fine/acceptable/etc. I made two gallons of volume.
Oooh gotcha. Misread!
If you made one gallon, that is perfect/fine/acceptable/etc. I made two gallons of volume.
Mines been in for over 2 months and still cloudy and fruit is still floating. The yeast activity is done, airlock has settled. I had plenty of airlock activity for a long time. I guess it is time to rack it to a secondary.
Well, we transferred our JAOM variant over to secondary last night. Gallery here, sorry for potato quality.
The Rock and Rye theme I was going for worked out really well. It took on exactly the flavor profile I had hoped for, and is surprisingly drinkable for a young mead. It's sweet, with an orange spice flavor on the front and the taste of cherries following shortly after. There is no pithiness from the orange rind, which I know some people have complained about.
Did you, or can you, post your Rock-And-Rye recipe? Sounds like something I might try next.![]()
My 6 gallon cleared after 3 months and the fruit never fell. My 1 gallons cleared in 2 months and, again, the fruit didn't fall. I'm learning that the time it takes for this recipe to clear is a "your mileage may vary" guesstimate. I doubt racking will hurt it, but I think you could just as easily let it sit!
It did something weird, though: the honey separated from the water and sank to the bottom. I know this isn't unusual for this recipe, but my first attempt at traditional JAO stayed in solution. Oh well!![]()
I started a blueberry vanilla variant of JAO. 6 gallons with 1lb frozen blueberries per gallon and 6 tsp (or was it tablespoons...) of vanilla extract. Here it is when it first started fermenting. We've since topped it off with water, and it's going strong.
It did something weird, though: the honey separated from the water and sank to the bottom. I know this isn't unusual for this recipe, but my first attempt at traditional JAO stayed in solution. Oh well!
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That might be a ton of vanilla
Yeah, that happened to me once as well. I was using some very old honey, and it really didn't want to go back into solution. In the end it all fermented anyway.
I started mine in November 2015, and kept waiting for the fruit to fall. The raisins never did, and my notes don't include when the orange did. I bottled and sampled yesterday, and although my wife finds the alcohol flavor unpleasant, I think I like it.
My 6 gallon cleared after 3 months and the fruit never fell. My 1 gallons cleared in 2 months and, again, the fruit didn't fall. I'm learning that the time it takes for this recipe to clear is a "your mileage may vary" guesstimate. I doubt racking will hurt it, but I think you could just as easily let it sit!
After my brother and I tried our hand at a dry Metheglin last year we wanted to go with something a bit sweeter and fruitier.
We decided to give this a try, though we did vary the recipe a bit. I've been drinking Rock and Rye (recipe is about half-way down) and this seemed like a good mead to modify for a similar theme.
What we settled on:
5 Gallon Batch
18 lbs. fresh local clover honey
8 smallish Blood Oranges (for color, about 3-4 lbs worth)
Zest from 1 Lemon
1 bag of sweet/tart dried cherries (instead of raisins, probably 50-60 cherries)
4 sticks of cinnamon
2 whole cloves
1 Star Anise
1/2 oz of Horehound
This is fermentation after ~36 hours, looks like it's taking on some color from the blood oranges and cherries:
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We're considering soaking some rye whiskey into oak cubes and adding them to secondary before bottling.
Made another batch of JOAM today. I added a small squeeze of lemon, 4 bl pepper corns, and a small pinch of coriander along with the stock ingredients.
Peppercorns? That'll be interesting. I guess they're not too unlike clove. Have you used peppercorns in brewing before?
In beer, yes. In mead, no. I did see a few mead recipes using them and I tried to play it conservatively.![]()
Any bottling tips? The fruit has fallen! Just siphon into wine bottles?
I racked my mead into another carboy and let it settle for another week or two to reduce the chances of getting sediment in my bottles. If that's not an option for you, just be careful not to disturb the fallen fruit. Good luck!
I started a blueberry vanilla variant of JAO. 6 gallons with 1lb frozen blueberries per gallon and 6 tsp (or was it tablespoons...) of vanilla extract. Here it is when it first started fermenting. We've since topped it off with water, and it's going strong.
It did something weird, though: the honey separated from the water and sank to the bottom. I know this isn't unusual for this recipe, but my first attempt at traditional JAO stayed in solution. Oh well!
![]()
Did you still use the cinnamon and clove or did you eliminate that?
Did you still use the cinnamon and clove or did you eliminate that?
I'm a fan of cinnamon with blueberries
I've tried the combo in oatmeal, and I like it, too. I'm pretty new to brewing, though, and I didn't want to throw too much into the carboy without having a baseline. I'll start simple, then get more complex.
Make the mead without anything else and then make a tincture of cinnamon with vodka (carbon filtering really helps clean up the flavors and give you a neutral vodka from a cheap vodka). Then you can add a teaspoon at serving time and see what you like. I'd also try some citrus zest in there but just enough to know its there without too distinct flavors. Then next time you can incorporate it into the whole batch of you like it.
That's actually a fantastic idea. Thank you!!