RPh_Guy
Bringing Sour Back
I am still in design and testing stages. It's not as easy as I thought.Any photos of how you're making them?
I am still in design and testing stages. It's not as easy as I thought.Any photos of how you're making them?
I think you should do both. Make good notes the first time!Update: QA23 has passed its second sugar break and is now under airlock. That means all the yeasts in the yeast roundup are now under airlock, and all that remains is to wait for them all to finish fermenting. It appears that one may have already finished fermenting, and it seems that a number of others are nearly done also.
So, this does raise the question as to whether I should wait for all of them to finish before I start tasting them, or whether I should do it as they complete. I think it would be fairer to do them as they finish, because otherwise some will have the advantage of additional aging. What do you guys think?
I think you should do both. Make good notes the first time!
I really enjoy this thread and the ongoing input from your side and everybody else, so for me it would be nice to have some quick updates when you taste test and then of course the fully detailed final results at the end.OK. So, do you guys want to read only my bottom line conclusions at the very end of everything, or do you want to read my notes as I develop them?
Update: QA23 has passed its second sugar break and is now under airlock. That means all the yeasts in the yeast roundup are now under airlock, and all that remains is to wait for them all to finish fermenting. It appears that one may have already finished fermenting, and it seems that a number of others are nearly done also.
So, this does raise the question as to whether I should wait for all of them to finish before I start tasting them, or whether I should do it as they complete. I think it would be fairer to do them as they finish, because otherwise some will have the advantage of additional aging. What do you guys think?
Yeah, you're probably right.For the extra time that it takes for the rest of them to finish, I think the effects of "aging" will be zilch. We're talking a week or two, not months. I would wait till they're all finished and have a tasting party.
Pick a yeast that cold crashes great & has an alcohol tolerance in the ballpark ya want -- and you'll never have to backsweeten [emoji111] (That's exactly what I do for my ciders [emoji57]. ...and my 2 fav yeasts are D47 & S04 to get er done.)When they're all finished I expect they will have all fermented dry, so I'll be needing to backsweeten them, or at least samples of them, as part of the taste test, because I prefer sweet meads and, ultimately, that is the taste that will matter most to me. Not sure that I can standardize the backsweetening though.
Pick a yeast that cold crashes great & has an alcohol tolerance in the ballpark ya want -- and you'll never have to backsweeten [emoji111] (That's exactly what I do for my ciders [emoji57]. ...and my 2 fav yeasts are D47 & S04 to get er done.)
Cheers & looking forward to your overall results.
Yeppers -- I've been extremely happy with the consistency of my results w/ciders using this protocol over the past year. 1st attempt at a hobo vino underway -- lets see if it translates to grapes [emoji111]Really? Gosh, there are some many different viewpoints on this. I had thought the current received wisdom was that alcohol tolerance was too variable, even using the same yeast from the exact same batch of yeast, to get good enough repeatable results. Yet, you seem to be achieving it anyway.![]()
Yeppers -- I've been extremely happy with the consistency of my results w/ciders using this protocol over the past year. 1st attempt at a hobo vino underway -- lets see if it translates to grapes [emoji111]
^This. It's a compelling argument.The thing is with mead you can and usually will push a yeast beyond its stated limits using the latest protocol. That means 16% with most yeasts and that's a lot. With a traditional you really want to stay in the 11% range if you want your mead to be balanced and drinkable in a reasonable amount of time. IMO it's far more controllable and predictable to ferment dry and backsweeten after stabilizing it.
He is right though, not an argument so much as it is a fact. I can finish and have ready to bottle in two weeks a traditional Mead that has an ABV of around 10-12%. Lower sugar content takes less time to ferment out and is much easier to manage and is more predictable. Take gravity readings daily and finish around 1.01-1.02. If you could crash and drop the temp of your Mead close to freezing you won't have to add anything, the yeast goes into hibernation and drop out allowing you to rack everything in one step. Then bulk age or bottle. Pretty simple.^This. It's a compelling argument.
I believe that 14% will be more flavorful than 11%, but will take longer for the hot alcohol flavor to age out and for the subtle honey nuances to shine through. Not that I have much experience, but I do know that the 14% traditional I made was much better after a year in the bottle.I had heard that 14% ABV was optimal for mead, but if it's actually 11% or 10-12%, then so much the better.
Looking at the 3 different bottles of Schramm mead that I have, two are 14% and one is 12.5%. I'm not saying that Schramm is the final word on the topic, but for guidance it's perhaps useful to see what the ABV's are for a sampling of gold medalist meads and see what the median and standard deviation are.
As I pointed out on a different thread, measuring by weight is actually more sensitive than measuring SG, because for every point of change in SG, there are multiple grams dropped. I'm sure that if I were going purely by SG, then I'd probably be declaring many more of the yeasts as already finished.
To which thread are you referring here?
I have a batch of traditional mead that I made using Fresco (separate from the yeast roundup), and by all rights it should be finished already, because on 3/27 it had a very steady measured SG of 0.996. It has, however, continued dropping weight since then. I'm degassing it today in a vacuum chamber (in progress as I type this), and I'll see if that halts it from dropping any more grams of weight, or not.The continuing off-gassing after fermentation finished will lower the weight continuously even when nothing is happening anymore. Kind of like the airlock that keeps bubbeling although the beer is already finished. Degassing would help I guess.
They have airlocks on. If it's not bubbling, I don't think it's much of a factor, if any.Have you considered weight loss from evaporation? I mean these are not sealed containers.
Just an idea that popped in my head.