I live deep in the rain forest of West Africa and have been making mead for myself for about three years. I use self-venting mason jars, ‘cause that’s what I have (no other mead making “stuff”.) I usually drink my mead within four months and have been mostly content with the results. (I am TRYING to age some.
I wanted a beverage that was more enjoyable than the expensive bottles of wine which taste like they are mixed with mouthwash! The bonus of living here is that raw honey is abundant and cheap - bee bits, pieces of wax and other additions are included free of charge!
I was using bread yeast initially, then I had some wine yeast shipped here, but it took six months to arrive and then it had a short shelf life. I am now experimenting with wild yeasts, totem sticks and other ideas to start fermentation. So far the results look promising!
My mead has ranged from sweet to acidic. Some great, some not. I’ve dealt with that by adding fruit juice or herb tea before consuming to compensate. However, I am now focusing on developing a more consistent outcome (maybe not possible with the honey I get.)
All that as background to my question. Sorry it was long.
I’ve been reading and am confused about sweetness. Some people say more honey makes a sweeter mead, others say more honey produces higher alcohol. Somehow I doubt it does both. So which is it?
Given that I can’t (and possibly don’t want to) stop the fermentation process in my mason jars, is there a way for me to make sweeter (less acidic) mead without sweetening before serving?
I guess that was kind of two questions. Thank you for your responses.
I wanted a beverage that was more enjoyable than the expensive bottles of wine which taste like they are mixed with mouthwash! The bonus of living here is that raw honey is abundant and cheap - bee bits, pieces of wax and other additions are included free of charge!
I was using bread yeast initially, then I had some wine yeast shipped here, but it took six months to arrive and then it had a short shelf life. I am now experimenting with wild yeasts, totem sticks and other ideas to start fermentation. So far the results look promising!
My mead has ranged from sweet to acidic. Some great, some not. I’ve dealt with that by adding fruit juice or herb tea before consuming to compensate. However, I am now focusing on developing a more consistent outcome (maybe not possible with the honey I get.)
All that as background to my question. Sorry it was long.
I’ve been reading and am confused about sweetness. Some people say more honey makes a sweeter mead, others say more honey produces higher alcohol. Somehow I doubt it does both. So which is it?
Given that I can’t (and possibly don’t want to) stop the fermentation process in my mason jars, is there a way for me to make sweeter (less acidic) mead without sweetening before serving?
I guess that was kind of two questions. Thank you for your responses.