@WineMaker, @BernardSmith, @Aleatoric and everyone here, that goes for all of you as well.... This really turned out so well!I don’t think it’s going to make it too long.... thank you for the great mentoring!
But you are absolutely measuring the gravity. The difference is that what you are aiming for is a very specific specific gravity and not the gravity that is the result of random amounts of honey and water. So... if you REALLY want to add 5 lbs of honey you might need /want to make 2 gallons of mead... Or 4.5 gallons or ?? because what you REALLY REALLY want is to begin with say, a gravity of 1.090 - OR 1.100 or whatever... but the SG you select , you select for a reason and not because you've pulled that number from a hat. That said, a gravity of around 1.090 results in a well balanced wine - where flavor and alcohol are nicely balanced and where you can relatively easily balance tannin and acidity and mouthfeel with that ABV and that richness of flavor... A mead or wine that is at 18% ABV may result in the alcohol over-powering the flavors and the sweetness and flavors ... etc
A good example is port.In my opinion, high alcohol, high sweetness and more intense flavors and richness can work well to balance each other out when all are present simultaneously
A good example is port.
However, especially for beginners, I lean toward Bernard's POV. Make 1 or 2 gallon batches, first targeting a table wine ABV, e.g., 11% - 13%. If higher ABV is desired, increase the OG in successive batches. This gradual process provides experience, and if a batch does not turn out as desired, there's only 5 or 10 bottles to deal with, not 25 to 30.
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