Copy Link
Add to Bookmark
Report

Mead Lovers Digest #0273

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
Mead Lovers Digest
 · 8 months ago

Subject: Mead Lover's Digest #273, 6 March 1994 
From: mead-lovers-request@eklektix.com


Mead Lover's Digest #273 6 March 1994

Forum for Discussion of Mead Making and Consuming
Dick Dunn, Digest Coordinator

Contents:
more pricing info (John Glaser)
Mead Lover's Digest (byro@genie.geis.com)

Send ONLY articles for the digest to mead-lovers@eklektix.com.
Use mead-lovers-request@eklektix.com for subscribe, unsubscribe, and admin
requests. When subscribing, please include your name and a good address
in the message body unless you're sure your mailer generates them.
There is an FTP archive of the digest on sierra.stanford.edu in pub/mead.
If you have email access but not ftp, it will accept "listserv" requests.
Send email with message "help" to listserv@sierra.stanford.edu.

------------------------------

Subject: more pricing info
From: John Glaser <glaser@analog.ece.arizona.edu>
Date: Sat, 5 Mar 94 14:34:22 -0700

Just another price data point. I get my honey for $0.70 to $0.80 a
pound, for twenty-thirty pounds at a time. This is for unprocessed
honey, either mesquite or citrus blossom, depending on what's
available. This great price is due to the fact that I know a baker at
a restaurant who can just tack my order onto the restaurants. The
beekeeper doesn't care, and will even put my order in a separate
bucket, as long as I promise to return the bucket (I usually include
a couple bottles of mead for good measure).

Commercially, one can buy a two-pack (6lbs.) of semi-local honey
(it's from Phoenix, I'm in Tucson) for just under $6 at the local
Price Costco warehouse club, formerly Price Club. Don't know how
processed it is, but it looks pretty clear. I've never used it for
mead.

John Glaser (glaser@analog.ece.arizona.edu)

------------------------------

Subject: Mead Lover's Digest
From: byro@genie.geis.com
Date: Sat, 5 Mar 94 22:20:00 BST

I have brewed only 1 mead so far. It was made from raw honey, pure well water,
and a mix of European Ale yeast and Champagne yeast. I used 10 lbs honey
and added water to equal 5 gallons and the yeast. We didn't take specific
gravity. [ok, we're usually beer/ale brewers and usually more careful].
It took about 1 week for the mead to start fermenting enough to bubble the
airlock and it continued to ferment for several months, possibly 3 at
cool temperatures. We bottled it with 1/2 cup of honey and after aging
6 additional months it was tasted. It was clear, light straw color, semi-
dry, very carbonated with very tiny bubbles, and had a pronounced honey/
flowery bouquet. It has almost no honey taste, it's actually like a very
soft champagne with the honey all in the bouquet. [It's proved popular
enough that tasters of it have whined extra bottles out of us including
several friends in London] In any case, we're quite happy with it.

Our next project will need some help from more experienced mead brewers.
We would like to make a "wedding mead" in anticipation of that happy event
for two close friends. I understand that the Anglo-Saxons in pre-conquest
England made a wedding mead which was sweet and spiced. As this was also pre-
crusades...the spices used would not be those typically used now, right?

Anyone have any information or suggestions??

Barb Byro
BYRO@GENIE.GEIS.COM

------------------------------

End of Mead Lover's Digest #273

← previous
next →
loading
sending ...
New to Neperos ? Sign Up for free
download Neperos App from Google Play
install Neperos as PWA

Let's discover also

Recent Articles

Recent Comments

Neperos cookies
This website uses cookies to store your preferences and improve the service. Cookies authorization will allow me and / or my partners to process personal data such as browsing behaviour.

By pressing OK you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge the Privacy Policy

By pressing REJECT you will be able to continue to use Neperos (like read articles or write comments) but some important cookies will not be set. This may affect certain features and functions of the platform.
OK
REJECT