• PATRONS: Did you know we've a chat function for you now? Look to the bottom of the screen, you can chat, set up rooms, talk to each other individually or in groups! Click 'Chat' at the right side of the chat window to open the chat up.
  • Love Gotmead and want to see it grow? Then consider supporting the site and becoming a Patron! If you're logged in, click on your username to the right of the menu to see how as little as $30/year can get you access to the patron areas and the patron Facebook group and to support Gotmead!
  • We now have a Patron-exclusive Facebook group! Patrons my join at The Gotmead Patron Group. You MUST answer the questions, providing your Patron membership, when you request to join so I can verify your Patron membership. If the questions aren't answered, the request will be turned down.

Using Dried Fruit

Barrel Char Wood Products

LittleCity

NewBee
Registered Member
Jan 4, 2008
7
0
0
Papillion, NE
How do you get the maximum amount of sugar, flavor, etc. out of dried fruit? Boiling, infusing, pureeing, or a combination of several methods? I have some dried Apricots I would like to turn into a mead.
 

wayneb

Lifetime Patron
Lifetime GotMead Patron
Although working with dried fruit often results in different flavors than if you used fresh, you can get some very pleasing results. When I work with dry fruit, I generally prefer to chop it into coarse chunks, then rehydrate it by placing the fruit in a pot that you can tightly cover, then I pour very hot (boiling hot is OK, but don't add more heat once you've added it to the fruit) water over the fruit until the fruit is covered by a layer of liquid. Then I cover the pot and wait for it to cool to room temperature. I then add a little pectinase (pectic enzyme), and add the fruit with its hydration water to my fermenter.

Note - if the apricots that you plan to work with are commercially dried, they may have been treated with sulphites to prevent them from spoiling or browning. In that case I'd wait a day after hydrating before I'd mix with the rest of the must and pitch yeast.
 

LittleCity

NewBee
Registered Member
Jan 4, 2008
7
0
0
Papillion, NE
I understand that adding Pectic Enzyme extracts body and color from fruit. Chopping the fruit exposes more surface area. The boiling water helps rehydrate it more quickly, I think. Why should I not add more heat after the boiling water is poured over the top of the chopped apricots?
 

machalel

NewBee
Registered Member
Feb 1, 2012
115
0
0
Australia
Pectinase actually helps break down the pectin, which is extracted from the fruit when it gets heated to a specific temperature (different for each type of fruit). Pectin is the substance that you add to jam / jelly etc to make it "thick", and will make your mead / beer / wine hazy and opaque.

If you heat up the fruit, not only does this release the pectin, but it also changes the taste (think about the difference between a fresh apple and stewed apple).


Edit: Here's something that I didn't realise until recently. If you click on the highlighted words in any posts, it will take you to a page that talks about that word. Quite useful! :)
 

fatbloke

good egg/snappy dresser.....
GotMead Patron
-----%<-----
If you heat up the fruit, not only does this release the pectin, but it also changes the taste (think about the difference between a fresh apple and stewed apple).
-----%<-----
That's only partially correct. It's "green or white fruit" that invariably changes taste when heated - your analogy of apples is right on the money.

But there are many "black or blue fruit" where heat is a good source for enhancing the flavour, think blue berries, black currants etc. On their own, they're pretty bland and/or a little acidic tasting, yet when they've been heated/stewed, damn the taste improves - think on the raw fruit taste, then the taste of the jam/jelly (the sugar helps a lot too.....)
 

Chevette Girl

All around BAD EXAMPLE
Moderator
Lifetime GotMead Patron
Apr 27, 2010
8,447
59
48
Ottawa, ON
The winemaking book I use (Joy of Home Winemaking by Terry Garey) suggests soaking apricots and then tossing the soaking water to get rid of the sulphites they use to keep them from browning, adding fresh water, THEN chopping and pectinasing them.

I've also used raisins in large quantities, I do the hot water drench, soak till cool, then skim off the oil they use to keep the raisins from sticking together (shouldn't be a problem with apricots but might be for other fruits), then coarsely chop them in the blender. I only find I need to worry about the oils if I use more than a couple pounds per gallon.
 
Barrel Char Wood Products

Viking Brew Vessels - Authentic Drinking Horns