@Paul Gardner
"I like your comment. Today's generation AND its immediate predecessor know very little about patience. I'm 74 and just learning what it takes to make a good wine. I'm ready to bottle my first attempt that I made from my own Niagara grapes. I'll see if this old duffer has paid attention to what I've been taught."
Patience is catering to Boomers at a Dunk's, in your mid thirties, for twelve dollars an hour and raising a toddler by yourself as a schizophrenic alcoholic with PTSD; lots of details in the latter, but they come organically as opposed to the rigid, authoritarian details of the Dunk's machine. It's that trial and error of the beginning; organic, playing it by ear, sometimes in uncharted waters.
I like coming at life like that, and making mead is no exception. That's why I call my yield "Ghetto Mead". All materials bought with food stamps. The guitar analogy further back is pretty close. Can I perfect my ghetto mead to taste better than Chaucer or Viking Blod? I definitely got the bug. You get better at a thing when you do it over and over again, and if you're gonna fail to produce Moonlight Meadery quality on your second try, you might as well fail with style. Can I do with mead what I did with guitar? Can I knock the socks off an entire bar with mead in a plastic spring-water jug marked "Ghetto Mead" with a sharpie? I can get a room full of drunk people singing and dancing to three chords because I tempered them into something more with practice.
Regarding Brewsy; well, they didn't sell me on the duration of fermentation, it was probably the colors, the marketing language, and some alleged Brewsy community. It sells itself as a party in a box, and I guess I'll see if it's palatable enough for a guy who lived off Steel Reserve, Natty Daddys, and MD 20/20.
The process is very much like techniques I learned from people who did time lol
I got a wine with my meads, so I guess I'll find out. I honestly thought I was going to have to ferment for six weeks until I read up on it more. Now *there's* a pretty crucial detail I missed.
A question I can't get off my mind though: what happens if I ferment the mead with Brewsy for the conventional duration?
I guess I'll see how my wine turned out the Brewsy way, and use the three airlocks for future endeavors. Mostly mead. Experiment with different yeast, honey, etc al.
Brewsy? Well it was on a good discount, so I figured I'd give it a shot, maybe learn some things that I could apply to other ingredients.
I'll be sure to give both the wine and the mead a review here. Youse all need a review from the world of people who could only afford Gallo, Kendal Jackson, Francia, and the like. The people who give a heartfelt comparison to Pabst Blue Ribbon and Narragansett. I wonder if Brewsy can do barley wine lol