Hi guys and gals. Was wondering if someone had a simple mead recipe or video with instructions. I am just looking to make a gallon for starters.
Thank You.
The trick with mead seems to be nutrients, they need plenty but not so much as you can taste them at the end (took me ages to realise that's what I could taste).
I will be bottling a traditional and a BOMM in the next week or 2. the traditional stuck despite nutrients but I eventually got it finished. The BOMM (Bray's One Month Mead - uses Wyeast 1388) went smoother but took about 2 months to finish for some reason, I sourced Fermaid O for that one from ebay.
If you want an easy start use about 1 kg honey made up to 5L, that should give about 1.060 OG, a teaspoon of nutrient, I like Tronozymol as it's got a heap of micro nutrients too, and a sachet of yeast and it should ferment out to a dry 7%. I did 2, the first with D47 which I fermented dry then primed and bottle conditioned, it was like a dry cider. The second got S-04 and was stabilised at 1.007 (or 1.004 I always forget and my notes are never to hand) which left it as a still, barely off-dry wine. These fermented out in about 2 - 3 weeks without a hitch and I used tesco orange blossom honey in both, and the BOMM above.
Hi
This guy has a few mead vids on his You Tube channel, this one is a simple one to follow
5 jars of 340g honey. 1 pack of Lalvin EC-1118 yeast and a teaspoon of nutrient. Leave a bit of head space to top up later and feed with 1/2 tps of nutrient every few days for about a week. Leave for a few months the you can rack it.
Kinda, you shouldn't need to strain it unless you have fruit in it, at which point a bucket is probably a good plan. Why not just ferment in the demijohn the whole time?Can this be done the normal way in a bucket for a week then strained to a demijohn?
Does that actually have any effect on the flavour?
Why's there more bits in it? What recipe are you using?I figure you’d lose more than usual in the racking from primary to secondary if there’s more bits in it?
Ah, your on Joe's Ancient Orange, Haven't read that recipe in years (and never made it) but using a bucket initially would still be fine, easier to get the orange pieces out.It seems like a lot of these recipes have bits of orange or cinnamon sticks or cloves floating around in them, I was wondering if there was a tidier way to do this.
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