TheSeed
Experienced Novice
Hello everyone. My name is Gavin. Aside from my first name I am very withholding of personal details online, so I apologize if you were expecting to hear/ask about my age, location, etc. I'll just say I live in the central United States with my brother, and I'm old enough to kind of remember the 1980's a little
Like many recently, my brother and I got into home wine (specifically mead, for us) making during the 2020 lockdown. We started with one of those all-in-one home mead making kits from Amazon. The process ended up being so much fun for us, that we got a bit fervent about it and started creating several small batches every month. Mead making has dominated our fermentations, but our archive includes about 3 dozen various wines. They have all been fruit (sometimes with added sugar) wines, specifically fruits other than grapes. Our experience has not involved grapes with the exception of four pyments, so the traditional concept of winemaking is really not where our experience lies at all. We are greatly interested by it, and hope to experiment with making wine with actual wine grapes before long.
We are going to be moving sometime this summer, so we stopped creating new batches and will only resume after we are settled in our new location. During these months, I am going to be focusing on learning as much as I can from literary sources and community members at places such as this.
I am happy to make your acquaintance, and hope I can be as helpful as I am helped. Feel free to ask me mead questions! I am not a master mead maker by any means, but I have learned a lot these past years and anything I don't know - I almost certainly know someone who knows.
Like many recently, my brother and I got into home wine (specifically mead, for us) making during the 2020 lockdown. We started with one of those all-in-one home mead making kits from Amazon. The process ended up being so much fun for us, that we got a bit fervent about it and started creating several small batches every month. Mead making has dominated our fermentations, but our archive includes about 3 dozen various wines. They have all been fruit (sometimes with added sugar) wines, specifically fruits other than grapes. Our experience has not involved grapes with the exception of four pyments, so the traditional concept of winemaking is really not where our experience lies at all. We are greatly interested by it, and hope to experiment with making wine with actual wine grapes before long.
We are going to be moving sometime this summer, so we stopped creating new batches and will only resume after we are settled in our new location. During these months, I am going to be focusing on learning as much as I can from literary sources and community members at places such as this.
I am happy to make your acquaintance, and hope I can be as helpful as I am helped. Feel free to ask me mead questions! I am not a master mead maker by any means, but I have learned a lot these past years and anything I don't know - I almost certainly know someone who knows.