wpt-me
Member
I was quoted a price of $7.00 dollars a pound by a
bee keeping group here in Maine.
Bill
bee keeping group here in Maine.
Bill
You might want to avoid buckwheat. Tupelo honey makes an incredible mead but the secret is in the yeast and in feeding the yeast enough nutrient while fermenting at lower rather than higher temperatures. That said, any honey blend will make a decent mead and if the honey doe snot have a really distinctive flavor you might consider boiling the water you will use to dilute the honey with a flavor rich hops for 10 - 15 minutes... Hopped meads are very delicious.
Have you decided where you are going to get your honey and which kind yet? It would be a lot cheaper for you to find something local, but if you don't have that option, I can post a couple of links from beekeepers I've used.
I might use 1/4 to 1/2 oz per gallon. Remember , it's not for a beer so the hops are not being added to balance the residual sweetness from unfermentable sugars in the malt. The idea is to provide additional flavor notes if you are making a low alcohol mead since low alcohol can mean less flavor in a mead. I have seen some old folk recipes from eastern Europe where people added hops to low alcohol meads made to be drunk a few weeks after the yeast was pitched
Nelson Sauvin hops can add a fruity, a wine-like flavor
3lbs honey / gallon, should ballpark you about 1.085-1.090 SG
3lbs honey = ~1 quart
You'll still want to shoot for something like this.
It might come in as high as 1.100, which is still okay.
Every batch of honey is different.
You can push the alcohol higher in future batches, when you have a better understanding of how it changes the profile of the finished product. You don't need to push it higher to enjoy the mead though, it's not necessary.
I've never done the hops things, so you'll want to listen to Bernard for that, for sure.
3lbs/gallon will give you a very nice finished product though, provided everything else goes acceptably well - sanitation, fermentation, racking, aging.
Pushing the alcohol higher with meads, increases the amount of honey, which makes the solution/must a harder place to propagate the yeast. More honey influences the acidity, and honey itself is already lacking in yeast nutrition, so adding more increases the gaps within the nutritional profile. They have an abundance of vitamins and nutrients that they need in small quantities but the main course never shows up until you add formulated yeast nutrients.
So adding more honey makes the fermentation more difficult due to the nature of honey and yeast, alters the finished product both in ABV and TA/pH, is more expensive (more honey), and the kicker here, the alcohol will actually hide the flavor if you crank it up high enough.
Beautiful answer!
3lbs honey / gallon, should ballpark you about 1.085-1.090 SG
3lbs honey = ~1 quart
Depends on what you're shooting for,
If you're making a mead - as in, honey only, then it depends on how much (and how) you like your honey
If you can handle the flavors of the darker, bolder honeys, then you might consider a mead made with them
But usually Clover, Wildflower, Blackberry, are preferential - something lighter.
If you're adding fruits, then it depends on what you're showcasing - the fruit, the honey, or both?
If its the fruit, then your honey need only be something like Clover or Wildflower
If its the 'both', then you'll want something that's worth showcasing
Likewise if it's the honey, with a slight fruit undertone, then you'll want something worth showcasing
There's a lot of room for self-expression/art in all of this..
3 lbs of honey is roughly 1 quart. I usually empty the jar into my primary, then use super hot water (not boiling) to fill the quart jar 3 times. That's four quarts worth of liquid which equals 1 gallon. Stir really, really well. I have a drill with a fancy stirring attachment (a plastic clothes hanger I cut) that makes quick work of this step. Then I take a hydrometer reading and see where I am at and add more honey or more water, whichever gets me to the starting SG I wanted.
Likewise, if you add 1 gallon of honey, fill/rinse the gallon jug 3 times into the primary. That should get you into the ballpark.
Hope that helps.
@hounddawg
Richard,
Have you started your mead yet?
sadly no. I had to put it back a month, I've gathered everything but my honey
so the third of next month I will order my wild flower honey, you know how bills are they come from nowhere and multiply while in route to your mail box,
so I have been forced to wait, but as soon as my honey comes in I will post for sure,,,
Dawg
Oh no hurry, just wanted to see how you are coming along is all.
We are getting to be mead snobs over in this household! It seems like we just want to make mead only and no wine at all here lately.
If you end up liking it you may have to start budgeting for honey!
LOL JUST WONDERING HOW LONG DO YOU AGE YOUR MEAD,,
Dawg::
As long as I can keep Manthing out of it. It's usually ok at 6 months, but after a year is when it really starts to bloom.
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