As the philosopher Wittgenstein wrote "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
Ergo, I must remain mum regarding Wittgenstein!
As the philosopher Wittgenstein wrote "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
Ok...here we go!
This is going to be both a flavor experiment and an experiment in using less ingredients.
I've been on Reddit and some of the other mead sites, as well as blogs and quite a few people are making mead without a lot of additives. This may end up being an epic bomb but I wanted to try it on for size.
This will be a 2 gallon batch
Juniper Grapefruit Mead
2 Star Anise
40 juniper berries
6 lbs honey
40 raisins
1 gallon water (plus 1 quart to take care of racking shortage)
1 gallon ruby red grapefruit juice
D47 yeast
Crush juniper berries. Add star anise and juniper to one gallon of water, bring to a boil. Remove from heat and let steep for one hour.
Strain solids.
Add honey and raisins, return to heat. Heat just enough to mix well. Add to carboy along with grapefruit juice.
When cool enough, pitch yeast.
Starting gravity is at 1.09.
Got mine started today too!
Blackberry-Apricot Melomel
- 6.75 Lbs Canola Honey
- Water to 10L
- 2 tsp Go-Ferm
- BA 11 Yeast
I got the Go-Ferm/Yeast mixture going, then put the honey into the pail. Added really hot water to about 7L, then mixed to dissolve. Added cold water to 10L.
Added the must to the Go-Ferm/Yeast mixture as indicated in the Go-Ferm instructions. Then pitched the yeast. I've put it into a cool room and will try and get my nutrient additions right.
Pictures to come
Really interested in this one Rae. Are you waiting to add your fruit or is it already bagged and in primary?
Lol....er...sorry about that. I think 2015 might be the year of the anise.Dang Jeri, you and that anise. You have me using it now.
Hey @x_diver, not sure if you have done much with calcium carbonate before? Just in case, here's a little excerpt from morewinemaking.com :
"Potassium Carbonate or Calcium?
Note: Using potassium carbonate requires that the fermenter be stored cold (below 40 F) for several weeks after the application. During the period of cold stabilization the tartaric acid drops out as potassium bitartarate. Calcium carbonate can be used in a similar manner and does not require cold stabilization. However it can adversely affects flavor if you are trying to make an adjustment of more than 0.3 pH units, and takes a month to precipitate out of solution."
Not sure how much it will affect the flavour, but I just wanted to mention
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