davewaldo
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- Joined
- 14/9/08
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Hi everyone,
I had a great time out at Chappo's today brewing and sampling several peoples beers. Thanks guys! I also shared a couple of my meads with everyone. They seemed to be well received and I was asked to post some of the details and recipes. So here goes....
I don't intend this to be a indepth study in mead making, or to say that my way is the only way. Hopefully this will be a quick intro to making mead using contemporary techniques (staggered nutrient additions and aerating till the 1/3 sugar break).
The sweet mead from today was a simple Organge blossom honey mead using US05 yeast. The Dry mead (which most prefered) used Eucalyptus honey and Lalvin D47 wine yeast (a great yeast for simple pale meads).
Firstly a few things to note about making mead. Mead takes time, you need patience. Making mead in a modern way such as I prefer differs in many ways from brewing beer. And like making good wine or beer you need good raw ingredients if you want good mead. This usually means finding nice unprocessed honey which has good flavour and aroma properties to start with.
I will post my recipe notes here now and explain things underneath:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweet Mead:
• 1.5kg Orange Blossom Honey (Beeutiful Honey Brand - South Australia)
• FermaidK or Craftbrewer Yeast Nutrient
• Batch Made to 4L
Warm Honey in a water bath in sink. Prepare 3L of warm water inside Carboy at using filtered water. Add honey and stir well to ensure thoroughly mixed and aerated. Cool carboy and mixture.
Re-hydrate yeast in Go-Ferm as recommended. If you don't have Go-Ferm just use water. Nutrients when re-hydrating are bad as they contain DAP which can damage re-hydrating yeast cells. Use yeast hulls can be good.
Wait until must is around 20C then pitch yeast. Mix in thoroughly and aerate some more. Ferment at 18-19C
Add 1g (1/4 teaspoon) of Nutrient after lag phase
Starting Gravity: 1.120
Aerate everyday until 1/3 sugar break. Once 1/3 sugar break is reached add another 1g Nutrient and aerate for the last time.
Continue to swirl the carboy to keep yeast in suspension everyday or every other day.
Fermentation should cease within a week or two (mine finished very sweet at 1.045), then cold crash to help the yeast fall out then rack to a fresh carboy for ageing. If little yeast has been brought across no more racking should be necessary. The mead will clear and then can be aged and bottled. The mead should be left to age in bulk for as long as possible. I try to leave for 6 months at least before bottling. the mead should be clear enough to read newspaper through the carboy.
I find this mead is good to drink as young as 2 months, but it really gets very good after 6 months and is scary how un-alcoholic it tastes after a year.
Dry Mead
Ingredients:
• 1.7kg Honey
• Water to 4.5L
• Lalvin D47 Yeast
• Fermaid K 2g per 4L Total amount
• GoFerm
Essentially the same process as above. However more honey is used as the wine yeast has a higher alc tolerance.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So how do you plan a mead? My thought process often goes like this...
Do I want it sweet or dry? If I want sweet I need to include enough honey so that when the yeast stops at its alc tolerance there is still sugar remaining. If I want dry I just ensure the sugar level is lower than the yeast's alc tolerance.
EG: I want a slightly sweet / off dry mead over 14% alc. So I want it to finish around 1.010. I want to use D47 which has an alc tolerance of 14%. A SG of 1.103 will give me 14% alc when it goes down to 1.000 so I would want 1.113 (plus 10 points) as a starting gravity. Make sense? I would usually round up a bit as some yeasts can go beyond their stated alc tollerance.
If I want dry I could choose any alcohol percentage I want less than 14% and aim for than in the finished mead.
All this info is to make plain simple mead, those which just have honey, water and yeast. Once you understand these principles you can go crazy and start adding fruit, spices, grain...... I also manage must PH levels during fermentation and lots of other crazy things. But following these steps should produce a nice clean mead.
Bring on the questions!!!!
But first here are some links:
A calculator to determine honey/ mead must gravities: Mead Calculator
Excellent info from Brewer Pete and Airgread (good people to listen to) about managing Mead fermentation: Thread 1 Thread 2 More info from others
There is lots of info already on this site so do a search but also visit the gotmead website and have a read, especially there newbees sections.
Thats enough for now, my head hurts....
I had a great time out at Chappo's today brewing and sampling several peoples beers. Thanks guys! I also shared a couple of my meads with everyone. They seemed to be well received and I was asked to post some of the details and recipes. So here goes....
I don't intend this to be a indepth study in mead making, or to say that my way is the only way. Hopefully this will be a quick intro to making mead using contemporary techniques (staggered nutrient additions and aerating till the 1/3 sugar break).
The sweet mead from today was a simple Organge blossom honey mead using US05 yeast. The Dry mead (which most prefered) used Eucalyptus honey and Lalvin D47 wine yeast (a great yeast for simple pale meads).
Firstly a few things to note about making mead. Mead takes time, you need patience. Making mead in a modern way such as I prefer differs in many ways from brewing beer. And like making good wine or beer you need good raw ingredients if you want good mead. This usually means finding nice unprocessed honey which has good flavour and aroma properties to start with.
I will post my recipe notes here now and explain things underneath:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweet Mead:
• 1.5kg Orange Blossom Honey (Beeutiful Honey Brand - South Australia)
• FermaidK or Craftbrewer Yeast Nutrient
• Batch Made to 4L
Warm Honey in a water bath in sink. Prepare 3L of warm water inside Carboy at using filtered water. Add honey and stir well to ensure thoroughly mixed and aerated. Cool carboy and mixture.
Re-hydrate yeast in Go-Ferm as recommended. If you don't have Go-Ferm just use water. Nutrients when re-hydrating are bad as they contain DAP which can damage re-hydrating yeast cells. Use yeast hulls can be good.
Wait until must is around 20C then pitch yeast. Mix in thoroughly and aerate some more. Ferment at 18-19C
Add 1g (1/4 teaspoon) of Nutrient after lag phase
Starting Gravity: 1.120
Aerate everyday until 1/3 sugar break. Once 1/3 sugar break is reached add another 1g Nutrient and aerate for the last time.
Continue to swirl the carboy to keep yeast in suspension everyday or every other day.
Fermentation should cease within a week or two (mine finished very sweet at 1.045), then cold crash to help the yeast fall out then rack to a fresh carboy for ageing. If little yeast has been brought across no more racking should be necessary. The mead will clear and then can be aged and bottled. The mead should be left to age in bulk for as long as possible. I try to leave for 6 months at least before bottling. the mead should be clear enough to read newspaper through the carboy.
I find this mead is good to drink as young as 2 months, but it really gets very good after 6 months and is scary how un-alcoholic it tastes after a year.
Dry Mead
Ingredients:
• 1.7kg Honey
• Water to 4.5L
• Lalvin D47 Yeast
• Fermaid K 2g per 4L Total amount
• GoFerm
Essentially the same process as above. However more honey is used as the wine yeast has a higher alc tolerance.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So how do you plan a mead? My thought process often goes like this...
Do I want it sweet or dry? If I want sweet I need to include enough honey so that when the yeast stops at its alc tolerance there is still sugar remaining. If I want dry I just ensure the sugar level is lower than the yeast's alc tolerance.
EG: I want a slightly sweet / off dry mead over 14% alc. So I want it to finish around 1.010. I want to use D47 which has an alc tolerance of 14%. A SG of 1.103 will give me 14% alc when it goes down to 1.000 so I would want 1.113 (plus 10 points) as a starting gravity. Make sense? I would usually round up a bit as some yeasts can go beyond their stated alc tollerance.
If I want dry I could choose any alcohol percentage I want less than 14% and aim for than in the finished mead.
All this info is to make plain simple mead, those which just have honey, water and yeast. Once you understand these principles you can go crazy and start adding fruit, spices, grain...... I also manage must PH levels during fermentation and lots of other crazy things. But following these steps should produce a nice clean mead.
Bring on the questions!!!!
But first here are some links:
A calculator to determine honey/ mead must gravities: Mead Calculator
Excellent info from Brewer Pete and Airgread (good people to listen to) about managing Mead fermentation: Thread 1 Thread 2 More info from others
There is lots of info already on this site so do a search but also visit the gotmead website and have a read, especially there newbees sections.
Thats enough for now, my head hurts....