TheNotoriousM.E.A.D
Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2018
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 8
I hadn't even heard of mead up until about 1 week ago when I stumbled across a YouTube video about making it. Seemed like a fun hobby, so I thought I'd try it even though I've never brewed anything in my life.
A little more research and a couple Amazon deliveries later (OK, more than just a couple) I have the following.
View media item 69207
I'm a scientist in my day job and it's quickly become evident to me that people rush too quickly to flavors and fruits. How about just finding a great, pure, golden mead and then using that as your base for experimenting with flavors? That makes sense to me and that's what I'm doing here. What you're seeing is 4 different honeys with different honey:water ratios. All of them use D47 and I will conduct further experiments with different yeasts in my next round.
Honeys
I started with a gallon jug like most people do. But instead of going bigger, I'm actually going to go smaller and use 1/2 gallon jugs as my standard for constantly trying new combinations
This morning I drove out to my first local apiary to get some honey. I now find myself saying, "east Texas is only a 5 hour drive away to get that honey . . . ". So I think I've been sucked into (suckered into?) this hobby and I'll see where this first experiment ends up.
A little more research and a couple Amazon deliveries later (OK, more than just a couple) I have the following.
View media item 69207
I'm a scientist in my day job and it's quickly become evident to me that people rush too quickly to flavors and fruits. How about just finding a great, pure, golden mead and then using that as your base for experimenting with flavors? That makes sense to me and that's what I'm doing here. What you're seeing is 4 different honeys with different honey:water ratios. All of them use D47 and I will conduct further experiments with different yeasts in my next round.
Honeys
- Round Rock
- Natures Nate (orange bottles, with the American bees)
- Local apiary (unfiltered, beautiful golden color)
- Local apiary via Whole Foods (really dark color but great consistency)
I started with a gallon jug like most people do. But instead of going bigger, I'm actually going to go smaller and use 1/2 gallon jugs as my standard for constantly trying new combinations
This morning I drove out to my first local apiary to get some honey. I now find myself saying, "east Texas is only a 5 hour drive away to get that honey . . . ". So I think I've been sucked into (suckered into?) this hobby and I'll see where this first experiment ends up.