Difference between revisions of "Mead"

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=== Sterilise ===
 
=== Sterilise ===
Fill the demijohn with hot water and add 1 tsp of bleach. Leave it to sit for a bit while washing up all the other equipment in hot soapy water and rinsing to remove traces of soap. Give the demijohn a shake and then pour out the bleachy water into a clean bucket to reserve for later. Rinse and shake the demijohn several times with plenty of water to remove all traces of bleach. Seal with the blooper cork and prime the air lock with a small amount of water, and set aside for sterilising any implements as needed.
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Fill the demijohn with hot water and add 1 tsp of bleach. Leave it to sit for a bit while washing up all the other equipment in hot soapy water and rinsing to remove traces of soap. Give the demijohn a shake and then pour out the bleachy water into a clean bucket to reserve for sterilising any implements as needed. Rinse and shake the demijohn several times with plenty of water to remove all traces of bleach. Seal with the blooper cork and prime the air lock with a small amount of water, and set aside.
  
 
== Method ==
 
== Method ==

Revision as of 01:47, 10 September 2012

Equipment

You will need:

  • a one gallon (4.5 litre) demijohn
  • cork
  • blooper (S-bend air lock)
  • a hydrometer
  • a sink full of hot soapy water
  • bleach
  • a bucket
  • a large metal skillet with lid
  • a whisk
  • a funnel
  • a small empty glass bottle or jar

Ingredients

  • 4.5 litres of water
  • approximately 1.1 kg honey
  • 1 lemon
  • wine yeast

Preparation

Make the blooper cork

If the cork for the demijohn doesn't already have a hole in it for the blooper, drill a hole vertically through the top, slightly smaller than the diameter of the blooper tube, so it fits tightly. Seal it up with a bit of beeswax if necessary.

Sterilise

Fill the demijohn with hot water and add 1 tsp of bleach. Leave it to sit for a bit while washing up all the other equipment in hot soapy water and rinsing to remove traces of soap. Give the demijohn a shake and then pour out the bleachy water into a clean bucket to reserve for sterilising any implements as needed. Rinse and shake the demijohn several times with plenty of water to remove all traces of bleach. Seal with the blooper cork and prime the air lock with a small amount of water, and set aside.

Method

Starting the brew

Measure 4.5 litres of water into the large clean skillet, bring to the boil, and leave to cool with the lid on. This is to reduce oxygenation and minimise natural airborne microbes, and may take an hour or two. When the temperature has dropped to just above blood-warm (about 40°C) add the juice of a lemon and about 1100 g of honey (see Calculations below) and stir gently to dissolve using a whisk, taking care not to unnecessarily aerate the brew by disturbing the water surface. Using the funnel, pour the brew into the demijohn, reserving ¼ cup into a small sterilised bottle.

When the brew in the small bottle has cooled to luke-warm (about 25°C) Add the wine yeast and leave for 10 minutes to activate. Once the demijohn has cooled to ambient temperature, pour the yeast mixture into the brew, re-cork, and swirl gently to mix.

Brewing

Leave for 3-4 weeks in a place that has a steady temperature slightly above ambient room temperature (ideally 26°C) and out of direct light. This might be simply wrapping a blanket around it and stashing it in a cupboard, or putting it next to the hot water cylinder. Yeast will die in hot weather, so do not exceed 40°C.

Decanting, settling and ageing

TODO
Haven't got here yet!

Once the yeast has settled out, gently decant the finished brew into another sterilised demijohn, taking care not to disturb or include any sediment. Although the sediment yeast can be saved and reused in future batches, it can eventually become contaminated with unwanted sulphur-metabolising microbes which spoil brews.

With this decanted brew, we may need to do several things:

  1. Add more sugar if the yeast has depleted the sugar before brewing out. We can determine this my measuring the SG of the brew, and by its dry taste.
  2. Add oak shavings, to "age" the brew, tasting daily for a buttery smoothness. This could be fun as I have no idea what it should taste like. This will also give it something to develop while it sits around in bottles for months.
  3. Infuse with a careful selection of herbs to make absinthe - e.g. lavender, mugwort, wormwood or other.

Bottling

TODO
Bottle it and leave it for a while.

Freeze distillation

Particularly if one has made mead absinthe, it can be repeatedly frozen and the ice removed until a liqueur has formed, which should roughly double the alcohol percentage.

Calculations

The percentage alcohol at which the yeast dies will determine the starting specific gravity (SG) of the brew, as measured by the hydrometer. If the hydrometer is nifty, it will have scales which tell you what your starting SG should be for a given final alcohol percentage, and how much sugar per litre you need. Commonly available wine yeast dies at about 12%, for which you need a starting SG of 1.09 g/cm³, achieved by adding 200g of sugar per litre. To produce 4.5 litres at 1.09 g/cm³ we need to add 900g of sugar. Since honey is about 80% sugar, we need 1125 g of honey.

Comments

Yeast consumes glucose and other sugars to produce carbon dioxide, which is released through the one-way blooper air lock, and alcohol. As the alcohol content rises, the yeast will eventually "finish", where it dies at a certain alcohol threshold. Different yeasts have different alcohol tolerance: ordinary baking yeast about 3 percent, beer yeasts 5 to 8 percent, and wine yeasts 12 to 15 percent. Very generally, if the yeast is killed before all the sugar has been consumed, the resulting brew will be sweet. On the other hand, if the sugar in the brew depletes before the yeast dies from alcohol, the brew will be dry. Sometimes this is deliberate, since adding a small amount of sugar during bottling will re-awaken the yeast in the bottle, producing more CO₂ in the bottle, and result in a sparkling wine, or beer with a "head", and hopefully not a basement coated in sticky brew residue and full of broken glass.