My son recently made a mead from a rather dark honey and the honey flavor is a little too strong/harsh. First, is there any way to tame it down some? Second, what is the best type of honey to use to yield a smoother and not as strong/harsh flavor?
Thank you.Here's the thing: every varietal honey - from orange blossom to Tupelo , from meadow foam to heather, has its own unique flavor (and aroma). Some honey - clover and wildflower, in my humble, are more like spear carriers than soloists. They are great vehicles for other flavors (fruit, herbs, spices, nuts and the like) but they cannot hold the spotlight. BUT... these "also rans" tend to be inexpensive. One honey - east coast buckwheat, might be OK on pancakes... but unless you are into the very earthy and some might say, horse stable flavors, you might want to avoid that honey like the plague (west coast buckwheat is said to be far more pleasant).
If your son has made a mead that no one likes - because of the flavors - not because of the amount of ethanol you taste and the lack of flavors but because of the intensity of the flavors (sounds like buckwheat - and that , for the record, was my first mead - I never mead another mead for more than 5 years because I found the flavor so undrinkable) , what you might do, is look for a wildflower honey (that is a term given to any honey where the bees are near any and every flowering plant withing a about 2 miles or so of the hives and no one species dominates -) and blend the undrinkable mead with this other one. But that said, my own philosophy is not to blend a poorly made mead (or wine) with a well made one in the hope of salvaging the poor one. What is likely to happen is that you now have a blend that you cannot drink.. so the better approach is to make the second mead and then take samples, of say, 25 ml of the first and add different amounts of the second (5 ml, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, ... to it... and see if you can find the sweet spot and use that ratio to blend the two. If there's no "sweet spot", then simply put away the awful mead and see if time improves it.
Not a burn in the back of the throat - just a very strong honest flavor, very strong.Harsh Is an interesting word to use. I have to wonder if the mead actually is oxidized? I describe low level of oxidized alcohol as an apricot like note and high levels as a burn in the back of the throat when swallowing.
Any idea when metabisulphite was used? how much head space was in the carboy?
Not clear from the OP if they had tried back sweetening the mead. That might mean stabilizing and adding MORE of the same honey or adding a different varietal that is less intensely flavored. Often, upping the finished sweetness greatly improves the balance of the mead or wine and helps bring to the front flavors that the dryness tends to mask or push towards the back.Mead maker here (above all else).
As others have pointed out, it sounds like your son used (what I call) a super-dark like avocado blossom or buckwheat honey. One of my first yeast comparison trials in early 2021 was a run of six half-gallon avocado blossom honey meads (~2½ bottles each, when finished). They bulk aged for about 2 months before bottling, and they were all rather harsh tasting like you described (so I know exactly what you mean).
It sounds like your son's mead turned out the same as my experiment runs, with a very robust roasted flavor reminiscent of strong, unsweetened dark roast coffee. My brother and I didn't especially care for the taste at bottling, though I found it more drinkable than he. I tried chilling some of the bottles, which helped a lot more than I expected. Just a couple months after bottling, I uncorked one and found the harshness had mellowed out considerably. Even still, the honey flavor was just a bit too intense to stand on its own.
Advisable options:
1) Chill before drinking
2) Age at least another 2-3 months before trying again
3) Use in cooking
I do NOT advise:
Diluting
Mixing with other meads
Adding adjuncts to alter the flavor
I am a member of multiple mead making communities and have discussed the use of super-dark varietals many times in the prevailing couple years. They definitely have their places in both home and commercial mead making--and are highly praised for those places--but using it by itself for a traditional just isn't one of them, at least not at the home mead making level.
raspberry, blackberry, cranberry even cloverMy son recently made a mead from a rather dark honey and the honey flavor is a little too strong/harsh. First, is there any way to tame it down some? Second, what is the best type of honey to use to yield a smoother and not as strong/harsh flavor?
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