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My wife is crazy....

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Kody_Wulfe

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She asked if we could use this for Mead...

Honey.jpg
 
If you like the taste you might like the mead. Add some wildflower or clover to get a couple of pounds and try a gallon.

It would be unique
 
If garlic is your thing then go for it. It sounds gross to me though. Beer and mead are very different in how spices and herbs affect them. For example: For beer, using 1 vanilla bean per 5 gallons is plenty. any more and it's excessively over powering from what I hear. I've seen mead recipes using 1-4 vanilla beans per gallon! That's a big difference. Some spices have the opposite effect. Less is more, more is less. I'd be hesitant to say the least.

Btw, I'm very new and I talk too much about it too, but I think she's finding it a little more interesting. I kinda get excited about all the recipes I'd like to try. My wife will only consume what she really likes so I'm really focused on not sucking at my meads. lol. I hope it works out.
 
I imagine that you could get the same results for a whole lot cheaper by just adding garlic and cayenne pepper to a regular batch of mead. Specialty products like that infused honey are never cheap and you'd need a lot of it even for a 1 gal batch.
 
Add it to individual glasses rather than to the whole batch. That's only half crazy.
 
Every time I read about a hop strain that has a garlicky or oniony taste, I run in the opposite direction as fast as I can. Imagining the same in a mead without any citrus or malt to hide behind sounds positively revolting.

Green light on the cayenne, though.
 
It does not sound good to me, but you could do a small batch (like a half gallon) and see. If it's enjoyable she'll feel good if not, she'll feel loved that you listened and tried her idea. Win win.
 
Taste it, if you like it go for it, and she is not crazy. If you taste it and you want to gag, then she is crazy.

If she tastes it and likes it, but you don't, you can make it for her and decide if she is crazy or not.
 
Whoa, Nelly! Does no one on this forum ever use wine in cooking? Why wouldn't a garlic infused wine make an incredible marinade or even a wonderful addition to a sauce? Hell's teeth! A tomato sauce made with a spicy mead could make a home-made pizza with sauted pears and covered with fresh arugula incredible... Your wife's not crazy, Kody. She thinks outside the box.
 
^yup, agreed. i make a onion/shallot wine (which is actually surprisingly drinkable) for cooking - it's awesome. no reason this couldn't be.

though i agree that it would be cheaper to make a cayenne/garlic mead with regular honey, plus cayenne and garlic.
 
A tomato sauce made with a spicy mead could make a home-made pizza with sauted pears and covered with fresh arugula incredible... Your wife's not crazy, Kody. She thinks outside the box.


Being from Chicago, I shuddered from the thought of this pizza! To me, that's a salad on a flat bread.

:ban:
 
Being from Chicago, I shuddered from the thought of this pizza! To me, that's a salad on a flat bread.

:ban:

In New York a salad is very different - Lots more textures, colors, flavors and vegetables. Up here that pizza is called a Rossellini - but we also know how to make a great bagel too...
 

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