Home arrow Submit a Recipe arrow Meadarrow Traditional Meadarrow No-Age Sweet Mead Ready in 3 Weeks -- J.M.
Wednesday, 19 June 2013
 
 
Mead Menu
Main Mead
Premium Patrons
User Menu
View My Articles
Submit Article
Write a blog entry
Show your blog
Submit Making Mead Article
My Home Page
Submit a Recipe
Login


Gotmead Newsfeed
Events Calendar
June 2013 > »
S M T W T F S
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 1 2 3 4 5 6

NOW ON GOTMEAD
No-Age Sweet Mead Ready in 3 Weeks -- J.M.
Created by webmaster, Tuesday, 30 November 1999 Average user rating vote imagevote imagevote imagevote image / 5 3 Users Voted
Ingredients
At a glance
Mead
Makes
1 gal
2 lbs 3 oz Unprocessed Clover honey (ok to substitute if you must)
7 oz Buckwheat honey (do not substitute)
.6t Grape Tannin (needed for taste and clearing)
1/8t Fermax (more will not be better)
1 5g K1V-1116 (must use this yeast)
Balance tap water to make 1 gallon (don't use distilled)
4 Liter Carboy if you have one otherwise use 1 gal
Methods/steps
Well here's the recipe and its my no age sweet mead in three weeks from start to drink.
I call it CW sweet mead because I use a buckwheat percentage blend and yeast combination that I received as a tip from Chuck Wettergreen (CW) and have been experimenting with for many months.

I use a procedure different than he does but am grateful for his unselfish sharing of his experience with natural mead making.
If you want the exact same results as I describe, please do not alter the ingredients or procedure. There is a reason to this madness. Here goes from my notes the latest batch ready:
---------------------
Batch #25
CW Mead Experiment
1 gallon recipe 68F fermentation temperature
---------------------
August 8, 2004
No boil, no skim, no sulfite. Dissolve honey in quart of warm water (tap water).
Dissolve tannin and 1/8t Fermax in 8 oz warm tap water.
Add honey mixture and tannin mixture to carboy and fill to 3 inches from top with cold tap water. Shake well to mix and aerate all ingredients.
Must OG = 1.100
Rehydrate K1V-1116 in 4 oz of tepid water for 15mins in dark place according to instructions on packet. Must temperature should be between 68-80F degrees. If so swirl yeast and gently pour yeast in carboy.
Install airlock and place in dark place or basement with temperature as close to 68F as possible. Will start bubbles in one hour.
After 2 days add a little honey/water mixture to bring to 2 inches from top
August 15th - SG 1.045 (1 week)
August 22nd - SG 1.020 (2nd week) and still working well - Taste great - Gotta stop here
August 23rd - Racked (all must except lees and approximately 5 oz of liquid) into clean 1 gallon carboy containing 1/8t potassium metabisulfite and 1/2t Potassium Sorbate. No need to top off since used 4 Liter carboy for primary and it is almost done.
August 24th - Already Clearing well
August 26th - can read newsprint already
Finished 3 days early. Wait 3 days if you can but it is one fine mead to drink now while you are waiting for something a bit stronger in Alcohol to age. Enjoy.
Cheers, Joe

-- submitted by Joe Mattioli

Additional Tips
OG: 1.100 FG: 1.020
Reviews
Comment by jpeshek , Tuesday, 04 January 2011 vote imagevote imagevote image
I followed this recipe to the letter, and got very different results. I started on 11/26/10, and we're not done yet!
S.G. READINGS:
12/3/10 1.078
12/9/10 1.060
12/14/10 1.049
12/19/10 1.036
12/28/10 1.022

At this point i racked onto the chemicals stated, but the fermentation continues, and no clearing as of 1/4/11. This yeast is capable of 18% easy; I hope that isn't where it stops. FYI, i made a 5 gallon batch and scaled everything up. If i hit 18%, I'll be adding 3 gallons of must to get it down to 12% :( After I'm done, I'll evaluate the taste.
Featured Mead Recipe
 
Top! Top!
“NEWTOWN, or Franchville, as twas called of old, is a sleepy little town, as you all may know, upon the Solent shore. Sleepy as it is now, it was once noisy enough, and what made the noise was -- rats. The place was so infested with them as to be scarce worth living in. There was not a barn or a corn-rick, a store-room or a cupboard, but they ate their way into it. Not a cheese but they gnawed it hollow, not a sugar puncheon but they cleared out. Why, the very mead and beer in the barrels was not safe from them. They would gnaw a hole in the top of the tun, and down would go one master rats tail, and when he brought it up round would crowd all the friends and cousins, and each would have a suck at the tail.”-The Pied Piper
Gotmead uses Vigilink to monetize relevant links
Site best viewed with Internet Explorer v6.x or above or Mozilla Firefox
The phrase Got Mead? and the graphics here are trademarked, please ask permission before using.