Threw together my mead yesterday in my second hand 15L demi (25 bucks form tipshop).
i know this recipe "is in balance" but I wanted to take the essence of this recipe and make it work for me. I mean there are countless variables within the original recipe that could alter the flavour dramatically, just to name a few:
- variation in the composition of honey used based on variety
- orange size, pith content oil content of skin
- size of cloves/cinnamon sticks and how old they are
- huge variation in the strains used in bread any given yeast without any guarantee of consistency.
So aiming for repeatability with such a recipe to me seems pointless.
So i ended up with roughly 3x the dosage of the original recipe
5kg of tassie lake gordon leatherwood honey. Apparently a strongly flavoured honey.
3 Oranges
7 cloves (not 6! - what a badass)
3 crunched up cinnamon sticks
3 handfulls of sultanas - are these the same as raisins? Dunno, I didn't have raisins.
Topped it up to 11.4L with water
3.5 tsp of Lowans bread yeast
Took the gravity reading after some good shaking at it was 1.170 adjusted for hydrometer temp. I had a think and worked out roughly that if the yeast had a tolerance of say 15% then the mead would finish at around 1.055. I dunno how sweet that will be for meads, because my last mead i made was pre hydrometer. If i use beer wort as a yard stick, its damn sweet. I'm certain that the gravity ready was correct, i tested twice after more shaking so i doubt i was just getting an unrepresentative sample.
So i diluted it to 12.25L and ended up with a slightly lower OG 1.159, hopefully for a somewhat drier finish 1.044. Worst comes to worst, i can pitch some champagne/wine yeast that has a higher tolerance to dry it out further. I probably should have done this in the first place, but i wanted to see how bread yeast would go.
Not using any temp control either. I dont want to tie up my ferm fridge for months so i put it in an old bar fridge (not turned on) with the door ajar wrapped in a towel so help it maintain some heat. obviously the yeast action is exothermic so even through the horrible weather in hobart at the moment, it should keep relatively warm.
I love controlling everything to do with my beer brewing down to the nth degree, but with this recipe i wanted to just wing it completely and honestly it was a lot of fun to make.
I'd like to know though what other people got for their OG. was mine about par for the course?
Cheers
Alex