Brewer Pete - 03 January 2011 said:I've been in a hectic state for a while with no time and had to move and all my gear is in storage so I'll be facing yet another major move soon and might find it hard to get online over the next 3 months or so, but I'll be back soon enough!
Goomba
Please be aware: abv is dependent on the amount of honey, amount of water, quality of honey, health of yeast etc.
The only way you can assume loans has a higher abv is to measure the gravity before and after.
Brewer Pete did a test and used lowans. I'm sure he'd have mentioned if it were highly tolerant. Check out his thread on JAO yeast off or whatever it was called
IMHO for some reason you had a lower grav must.
Also the raisins are so few that you wouldn't taste them. They're in the recipe as yeast fodder.
My yeast managed 13.5% and it was still sweet. Even using EC-1118 it still would have been semi sweet.
What were your honey to water measurements. I could estimate you SG from that, but all honeys are different.
My OP was purely an FYI post.
Provided the honey weighs 1.4kg/litre your values will give an OG of 1.120not sure if i'm reading this right but I thought 3.8 litres required 1.6 kg of honey
<snip>
Still, damn good, nonetheless. I'll make another dry and try a sweet at the same time.
Goomba
I would attempt different sugar levels well before I changed to wine yeast. From my calculations, the ABV of your must would probably be simmilar to what a JAO should be, but you just had no residual sugar. I'd increase your honey by at least 50%.
Buy a hydrometer. ensure your must is >1.100 and <1.140 and I think you'll do well.
The other thing about mead is that it hits harder than many other alcohols. It gives a MEAN hangover.
@ 14% it acts a lot higher. This is hypothesised to be because especially in younger meads the fusels and other higher order alcohols that may be present have a more debilitating effect on the imbiber.
By the above logic, nicely aged mead should be as polite as commercial wine WRT hangovers and ability to knock you senseless
Simply: no. You can't.Hi guys thanks for sharing your recipes and thoughts, I am about to make a small batch soon but have a question.
Are the oranges there for flavour or do they serve another purpose. Can I leave out the oranges altogether but keep the rest of the recipe the same or substitute for pineaple or pears.
Regards pete
Simply: no. You can't.
This recipe is carefully balanced. It is designed by a meadher with mor skill and experience than anybody posting here in the last 6 months.
It is recommended that you try it as per recipe before you alter anything.
That being said, the answer to your question is: yes. The pith in the orange imparts bitterness to the mead, carefully offsetting the sweetness. If you cut the orange into quarters, it will be overpoweringly sweet. If you cut it into sixteenths it will be overpoweringly bitter.
Make the recipe, do some research, then try a modification. But don't change anything until you have a baseline, or else you might as well just experiment blindly from scratch.
The raisins also play a part in feeding the yeast nitrogen. They won't impart much flavor, as there's nit enough in the recipe for that.
Hi guys
If I, for example, forgot to buy bread yeast when i was doing my shopping and used an aprox 15% wine making yeast I had lying around instead, any idea roughly how much extra honey I should add to get the sweetness level the same?
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