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Spiced Raisin Melomel – S.B.
Created by webmaster, Tuesday, 30 November 1999
Ingredients
At a glance
Mead
Makes
6 gal
20 lbs honey (strong flavored ones work best)
2 lbs dark raisins (haven't tried white ones yet)
2 Tbsp whole cloves (DON'T use ground ones)
1 oz citric acid
Water to 5 gal
1 pkg yeast (I use Red Star Montrachet)
Methods/steps
Dissolve honey in water, add raisins and cloves, & bring to a simmer (don't boil) for about 5 minutes.
Let cool to 95 degrees or so, reserving a small portion to start yeast.
Start yeast and add to must in primary fermentation container.
Rack to carboy after a week, removing raisins and cloves and topping off with water.
Rack again after 3 months and bottle @ 6 months.

Comments:
This is a recipe that I invented, and has become one of my favorites. It has a fairly strong flavor and is great when mulled. I didn't know whether to call it a metheglin or a melomel as it has both spices and fruit, so I decided to give up and coin my own word "melometh".
This can be drinkable after 3 or 4 months but its best to wait a full year to age properly.

Source: Sam Bennett This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Mead Lover's Digest #427, 29 August 1995

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“In order therefore to counteract these spells, she persuaded Serena to go and consult old Swillpot, the famous Cornish wizard, who dwelt near the waterfall at Nathans Kieve, and who, nurse Judy said, was noted for being a kind wizard in his way, that was if he entertained no spite against the person who came to consult him; and more especially if the individual gave him a purse full of money, and a jar of strong rich metheglin or mead, which had been made at the full of the moon (then considered the best time for making it), and was three years old at least. Judy declared, that she had metheglin in her own particular cupboard which had been made under all the quarters of the moon, and old Swillpot should have that decocted at the full.”-A Peep at the Pixies, or Legends of the West by Anna Eliza Bray
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