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North Carolina State Beekeepers Association

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Cool the honey-water down to 70 degrees. Now is the time to take the specific gravity reading. ... After a few days of fermenting: Now is the time to rack the mead. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: North Carolina State Beekeepers Association


1
Christopher Petreehttp//christopherpetree.com
North Carolina State Beekeepers Association
2
What is mead?
  • Mead is often called honey wine, but it is not
    a wine (simplification of concept)
  • Mead is an extremely old beverage and may have
    been the first fermented beverage
  • Mead contains three key ingredients water,
    honey, and yeast (in order of volume), and if
    successful, alcohol after fermentation

3
How does fermentation work?
  • Yeast feeds on sugars, creating two main
    byproducts alcohol and carbon dioxide
  • As the yeast feed, their numbers multiple
    exponentially
  • After the yeast exhausts the supply of sugar,
    they stop fermenting and go dormant or the
    alcohol concentration becomes so great that it
    creates a toxic environment
  • Different yeasts have different levels of
    tolerance to alcohol concentrations assuming the
    sugar is there to ferment
  • Beer is typically on the lower spectrum, usually
    8 or less by volume (Samuel Adams Utopias, 25)
  • Wine is typically more, averaging 13 by volume
  • Champagne is typically the most, averaging 14-16
    by volume

4
A complicated process...
5
What do you need to get started?
6
Equipment and Materials
  • Glass or plastic primary fermenting vessel
  • Glass secondary fermenting vessel
  • Airlock (rubber stopper)
  • Racking canes and tubing
  • Hydrometer and graduated cylinder
  • Cleaner (B-Brite, soak 30 mins.)
  • Sanitizer (Iodophor, soak 5-10 mins.) Chlorine
    bleach

7
Plastic primary fermenting vessel
8
Glass secondary fermenting vessel
9
Airlocks and carboy bungs
10
Racking canes and tubing
11
Hydrometer and graduated cylinder
  • Triple Scale Hydrometer
  • Specific Gravity (Ex. water 1.000)
  • Brix/Balling
  • Potential Alcohol

12
Yeasts and additives
  • Dry Yeasts
  • Red Star Montrachet Yeast (all purpose 10-15
    alcohol tolerance)
  • Red Star Pasteur Champagne (14-16 alcohol
    tolerance)
  •  
  • Recommended Additives
  • Yeast nutrient (aides and enhances fermentation)
  • Campden tablets
  • Acid blend

13
You have the equipment, now what?
14
A Small Recipe (One Gallon)
  • 3 qt. water
  • 3 lb. honey
  • 1 packet of any good wine yeast (Montrachet or
    Pasteur Champagne Yeast)
  • 3 tsp. acid blend
  • 1 tsp. yeast nutrient
  • 1 crushed Campden tablet (optional, added safety
    against contamination of mead potassium
    metabisulfite)

15
Mix water, honey and bring to a boil.
Skim off the protein that rises to the top.
16
Cool the honey-water down to 70 degrees.
  • Now is the time to take the specific gravity
    reading.
  • Pour some of the solution into the graduated
    cylinder
  • Add the hydrometer
  • Take down the reading of its final resting place
  • Ex. 1.100 SG has potential alcohol of 13
  • Return testing solution?
  • Then,
  • Add acid blend, yeast nutrient, and yeast
  • Mix well
  • Pour into primary fermenting vessel
  • Add airlock

17
After a few days of fermenting
18
Now is the time to rack the mead.
  • Racking the mead is a critical step because it
    removes the mead from dead yeast and other
    sediments that can give your finished product an
    off-flavor.Using a racking cane (as show
    earlier), or simple tubing, siphon the mead into
    your secondary fermenting vessel.

19
Let the mead finish fermenting.
  • Secondary fermentation can vary depending on a
    number of factors
  • Addition of yeast nutrient
  • Temperature of the area where fermentation vessel
    is stored
  • Type of yeast
  • Secondary fermentation may require another
    racking. After a week in the secondary, pour
    more of the mead into the graduated cylinder and
    take a reading. This will tell you the
    approximate alcohol content and how much sugar is
    left to ferment (if the yeast is tolerant to the
    alcohol concentration).

20
Great. How do I do this again?
  • http//forsythbeekeepers.org/about/member-articles
    /
  • "Mead Making the Wine Way, Part I"
  • "Mead Making the Wine Way, Part II" (Bottling)
  • If you don't have a computer, save a tree and
    buy one. Otherwise, let me know and I can get you
    a copy. These articles can also be found in the
    January and February 2002 issues of the American
    Bee Journal.
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