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Adding Honey to the Must after 1 week of Primary Fermentation

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SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
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So...

I thought I started with a gallon of honey, but it turns out it was only 10 lbs, and not the typical 12 lbs for a gallon.

On top of that, it was my first batch and I was ignorant, so I pasteurized the honey/water at the beginning, which I now know probably burned off a certain amount of flavor and aroma.

It's only been in the primary for a week, and it is still bubbling actively (once per second) in the airlock, and sounds kind of like lightly boiling water when I press my ear up to the bucket.

Would there be something wrong with opening the lid and pouring in another 5 gallons of honey at this stage, stirring, closing the lid, and giving it another couple of weeks before racking to the carboy for secondary fermentation? I don't want my mead too dry, but I don't want it syrupy or overly sweet either. I also want it to be fairly strong, which I doubt it will be if I don't add this 5 lbs.

Thoughts?
 

SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
34
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Oh, and if I do this, should I toss in a few ground up campden tablets, which I never added at the initial stage?
 

dingurth

Worker Bee
Registered Member
May 23, 2012
489
3
18
Brooklyn , NY
Just a little confused over how much you are trying to make. How big is your container and about how much mead are you trying to make?
 

TAKeyser

NewBee
Registered Member
Mar 4, 2012
1,228
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Detroit, MI
Please provide us with the recipe as it sits now. Honey, yeast selection, nutrients, fruits or spices, size of the batch. This will help us better give advice since we are flying blind right now.

Also what ABV are you trying to hit? If you add too much honey you may overwhelm your yeast and stall early leaving you with a cloyingly sweet mead.
 

SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
34
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0
Sorry, here's what I did.

10 lbs of Honey
4 gallons of water
Don't remember the exact yeast, but the guy at De Falco's said it was a mead yeast that was somewhere in between dry and sweet. No fruit or anything. Just water, honey, yeast nutrition, and yeast.

Pasteurized the honey with about a gallon of water (yeah, I now know I shouldn't have done this),
Re-hydrated yeast and set aside
Dumped must into Primary Fermentation bucket,
Added remaining 3 gallons of cold water,
Added yeast nutrition,
Stirred, swirled, aerated,
Pitched the yeast,
Closed the lid and stuck in the airlock.


This was eight days ago. I didn't catch the original gravity, as I didn't have a hydrometer until day before yesterday.

I have only had two types of mead before, one that (according to the label) was 11% alcohol per volume, and the other was 14%. I preferred the 14% mead. I'd like mine to be on the stronger side. I'm a scotch drinker, so I don't mind a good, hearty, alcohol taste.

It's only been fermenting for a week, and it's still going pretty active. If I added another 2.5 lbs of honey do you think it would overwhelm the yeast and stall, or would that probably be fine?
 

dingurth

Worker Bee
Registered Member
May 23, 2012
489
3
18
Brooklyn , NY
Adding 2.5 pounds should be fine. At 12.5 pounds for a five gallon batch, your mead is going to be pretty dry when its done, so I don't think you run any risk of smothering your yeast. You could even add more honey depending on how sweet you want it to be. I'd give it a good shake to aerate it though afterwards.
 

TAKeyser

NewBee
Registered Member
Mar 4, 2012
1,228
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Detroit, MI
From what I'm seeing I think you'd be fine adding another 2 1/2 lbs of honey. Not knowing the yeast it is hard to say where you will end up alcohol wise or where it will fall on the dry to sweet scale, but if it ends up too dry you can always back-sweeten later.

from my experience most brew shops aren't the most reliable when it comes to meads (most not all) so who knows what yeast they gave you. Truthfully there is no such thing as a sweet or dry mead yeast no matter what the manufacturer of brew shop says. It all comes down to recipe formulation.

But as I said you should be fine feeding the must more yeast. If it was me I wouldn't add it all at once though I would do a step-feeding 2 or 3 times until I got it all in.
 

TAKeyser

NewBee
Registered Member
Mar 4, 2012
1,228
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50
Detroit, MI
I'd give it a good shake to aerate it though afterwards.

I'd skip aerating at this stage. You had a low gravity must that has been going for 8 days so I'd think that you were well below the 1/3 sugar break and below the 1/2 break so oxygen at this point would be a bad thing.
 

SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
34
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0
I'd skip aerating at this stage. You had a low gravity must that has been going for 8 days so I'd think that you were well below the 1/3 sugar break and below the 1/2 break so oxygen at this point would be a bad thing.

What about gently stirring it in with a big spoon?
 

SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
34
0
0
that would be fine. It would degas the mead and get the excess CO2 out of suspension as well as mixing in the new honey.

Thanks.

Man, this place is great. What the heck did people do before the internet? Unless they knew someone personally, or had a mentor, I guess they just relied on books, and were unable to ask questions.
 

Valhalla Mead

NewBee
Registered Member
Apr 12, 2012
39
0
0
Adding upon the rest of these excellent replies I also recommend making sure the secondary is topped off....you don't want any oxidization going on.

Sent from my Desire HD using Tapatalk 2
 

SandorClegane

NewBee
Registered Member
Jun 4, 2012
34
0
0
Adding upon the rest of these excellent replies I also recommend making sure the secondary is topped off....you don't want any oxidization going on.

Sent from my Desire HD using Tapatalk 2

Will do.

I was going to rack to the secondary, top off, leave for 2 months.
Then rack to another carboy over medium toast oak cubes, add some campden tablets, leave for another 2 months.
Then I was going to bottle and age most of it, drink some of it right away.
 

Chevette Girl

All around BAD EXAMPLE
Moderator
Lifetime GotMead Patron
Apr 27, 2010
8,443
53
48
Ottawa, ON
Man, this place is great. What the heck did people do before the internet? Unless they knew someone personally, or had a mentor, I guess they just relied on books, and were unable to ask questions.

We did what we thought was best at the time and made a lot of mistakes, but usually drinkable :)

Oh, and if I do this, should I toss in a few ground up campden tablets, which I never added at the initial stage?

The purpose of the campden tablets at the initial stage (24 hours before pitching) is to knock out any other organisms so your yeast have a good headstart on anything else in your must. Adding them at any point after the yeast has been pitched but before your fermentation is complete just risks having your yeast poop out early on you. You are correct in the most recent post, you want to save those until it's time to stabilize. And especially if this doesn't finish dry, you might want to get your hands on some potassium sorbate before then, it keeps any yeast that wake up after being knocked out by the cammpden tabs from breeding.

Since you have a hydrometer now, you might want to check and see where your SG is. You'll want to check before and after adding you honey too so you have an idea how much sugar you're giving your yeasties.
 
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