Basic Mead
- 12 to 18 pounds of grade-A honey
- 4 1/2 gallons of tap or bottled water
- 8 grams (1/4 ounce) of freeze-dried wine, champagne, or dedicated mead yeast
- Making mead requires essentially the same basic kit necessary to brew beer at home: primary and secondary plastic-bucket fermenters with air locks and spigots, transfer hosing, a bottle-filler tube, heavy bottles, bottle caps, bottle capper, and a bottle brush and washer.
- You should be able to find these items for approximately $70 total (excluding the bottles) through a home-brewing supplier, such as The Home Brewery.
- Bottles cost from $6 to $20 per dozen, depending on style.
- You might instead buy a couple of cases of beer in returnable bottles, drink the beer, and after sanitizing them!
- reuse those bottles, for the cost of the deposit.
- All your equipment must be sanitized or sterilized before use.
- Ordinary unscented household bleach does the job fine.
- Put all the equipment (including the lid and stirring spoons) into the fermentation bucket, fill with water, and add 2 teaspoons of unscented bleach.
- Let it sit for 30 minutes.
- Drain the water through the spigot, rinse everything in hot water, and allow to air-dry.
- Bring the 4 1/2 gallons of water to a boil.
- Well water, by the way, should be avoided because of potentially high levels of strong tasting minerals like iron.
- Boiling should remove harsh chlorine from municipal tap water.
- If you don't own a pot large enough to hold five gallons of water, boil as much as possible.
- You will add the remaining water to the fermenter later.
- Once the water reaches a boil, remove it from the heat and stir in all of the honey.
- Do not boil the honey, as it reduces the aromatic quality of the finished mead.
- While the honey dissolves in the water, put a cup of lukewarm (90 to 100F) water into a clean bowl.
- Sprinkle in the yeast and cover the bowl with plastic wrap.
- When the honey has been fully dissolved in the water and the pot is cool to the touch (not over 80F), pour the honey-water into the fermentation bucket and stir in the yeast mixture.
- Note: Cooling the honey-water should take about half an hour.
- This process can be accelerated with a so-called sink bath, that is, repeatedly immersing the pot in cold water in a sink or basin.
- If you have not already added the full 4 1/2 gallons of water, top it off with the balance in bottled water (or tap water if you're confident of its quality).
- Seal the bucket and allow the mixture to ferment for two weeks to one month.
- The progress of fermentation can judged by monitoring the carbon-dioxide bubbles escaping from the air lock: When they drop to one bubble every sixty seconds, fermentation has nearly concluded.
- Note that is only an issue during this primary fermentation; secondary fermentation has more to do with aging and mellowing and hence is more flexible.
- When primary fermentation has subsided, siphon the mead over to your secondary fermentation bucket and seal it.
- Allow one to four months aging time.
- Do not open the fermenter, as this risks contaminating the mead.
- When you decide it has matured enough (and the mead has cleared), you will want to siphon it into sterilized bottles and cap them.
- Follow the same procedure as you would for home-brewed beer.
- My book Beer for Dummies has a detailed guide in its Chapter Ten, or consult the web site of the American Homebrewers Association.
- Keep in mind that this is a recipe for still (i.e., non-carbonated) mead.
- Mead typically improves with age, so the longer you can wait to open the bottles, the better.
honey, water, wine
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/basic-mead-201058 (may not work)