




A pyment is a standard mead made with the addition of grapes or grape juices. Alternatively. the pyment may be a homemade grape-based wine sweetened with honey. or a mead mixed with homemade grape-based wine after fermentation. A spiced pyment (hippocras). or a pyment with other ingredients should be cross-entered with that other category.



Mead goes back thousands of years. Some of the recipes have survided the ages. and we\'ve reproduced them here. along with modern translations. if necessary.

Quick meads are similar to sack meads in that they tend to be sweet, but the operative characteristic here is quick, i.e. done in a month or less, and drinkable in a short period of time.

This is a tough category, since fermentation creates alcohol. Your mead should contain little or no alcohol.

Fortified meads contain additional spirits to increase their alcohol level such as vodka, brandy or other liquor.

In here you'll find recipes from the old AMA, the Mazer Cup, and other sources that are for Patrons only.
The American Mead Association started publishing several newsletters in 1993, and ran until their last issue in the winter of 1997. The founder, Susanne Price, was killed in a car accident in 1996, and the organization never really regained its feet after the tragedy. Here we have re-published all the recipes that were printed in the AMA newsletters, with permission from Pamela Spence (author of 'Mad About Mead' and co-founder of the AMA).
















