Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (2024)

Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (1)

"Have you tried the honey liquor we call mead? It gives a man a halo." -Friar Tuck, in "Robin Hood" (2010)

You drizzle it on biscuits and whisk it into barbecue sauce, but would you ever think about fermenting honey?

Lucas Kluz turns honey into wine at his Westside home. It's a tradition, along with brewing beer, that he brings from his native Poland, where his father and grandfather made their own wine, beer and honeywine, or mead.

Kluz first tried his hand at fermenting as a teenager in Poland, and it has become a hobby. He makes five-gallon batches several times a year to drink at home and share with friends. He's a member of the Cowford Ale Sharing Klub and has won several awards.

Mead is considered a novelty in the United States, but it has a long history. Archaeologists have uncovered evidence of mead as far back as 7000 B.C. and say it is probably the original fermented beverage. It is found in almost all cultures, including Europe, especially northern Europe, where the climate is too cold to grow grapes.

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Americans probably most commonly associate mead with medieval England. Director Ridley Scott used mead in several scenes in last summer's "Robin Hood," with Friar Tuck and Robin sharing a glass.

Will Kalif of stormthecastle.com discovered mead through his interest in all things medieval.

"I'd heard of it but never tasted it. I tried to track it down and couldn't find any."

What he did find were wines flavored with honey that are marketed as "meade." But it's not the real thing.

Several years ago, Kalif and a friend decided to try to make a batch using instructions from a book. The first batch didn't turn out very well, but Kalif said he was hooked, and he continued to experiment, developing his own system that he shares on his website and through an e-book.

Kluz and Kalif are both home brewers, people who make beer or wine for personal consumption. It may be quicker to buy beer or wine in a store, they say, but making a batch from scratch has its own rewards.

Mead takes at least six months to ferment, longer for a smoother, mellower taste. And a batch can go bad - turn sour or be contaminated with microorganisms.

But when the yeast and sugar perform their magic, and the cloudy mixture turns clear, there is a special satisfaction in that first sip. It's a great way to impress friends and family, they say.

"It doesn't necessarily taste like honey, any more than wine necessarily tastes like grapes," Kluz said. "But if someone hands you a glass of mead, you will know it isn't the fruit of the grape."

Like wine, mead runs the full spectrum from dry to sweet, still to sparkling, Kluz said. The addition of fruit or spices makes mead exceptionally versatile. Sweet mead has more of a honey flavor, a heavier consistency and high alcohol content, Kluz said. Dry mead may not have a honey flavor at all.

Making mead isn't difficult. The basic ingredients are honey, water and yeast, though fruit juice and spices can be added. Mead makers search high and low for interesting honeys. The flavor of honey all depends on where the bees have been buzzing - a grove of oranges, a field of berries, a pasture of clover.

Kluz buys raw honey by the gallon from beekeepers. It costs about $25 a gallon and weighs a whopping 12 pounds. Kalif buys high-grade pasteurized honey and can spend up to twice as much.

Both men advise using filtered water and thoroughly sanitizing all equipment.

The ratio of water to honey depends on the type of mead you want to make. For a dry mead, the ratio is 4 parts water to 1 part honey; a sweet mead is 2 to 1.

Kluz likes his mead sweet, so he typically uses 1 3/4 gallons of honey and tops it off with 3 1/4 gallons of water. It produces a mead that is between 13 percent and 14 percent alcohol. He drinks it as an aperitif. For a less potent wine, less honey is used.

Because Kluz uses raw honey that can contain bacteria and other microbes, he heats his honey and water mixture. He uses the pot from a turkey fryer.

"The heat helps dissolve the honey," he said. "But too much heat can kill the flavor."

The mixture is heated to 160 degrees, the pasteurization temperature, for between 20 and 60 minutes and cooled to at least 80 degrees before the yeast is added. He also adds a yeast nutrient.

Kluz pours the mixture into a five-gallon jug and covers the opening with an airlock device that keeps out microbes that could taint the mixture but also lets out the fermenting gases. Without a vent, the gases can cause the bottle to explode. (Every home brewer has at least one horror story about an exploding bottle.)

The jug is put in a cool, dark place for two to three months. At first, the mixture will bubble as the fresh yeast consumes the sugar in the honey, producing alcohol. After a few weeks, the bubbling dissipates and the solids in the honey and the dead yeast settle on the bottom.

After a couple of months, Kluz transfers the liquid to another jug and discards the solids. He lets the mixture sit for another two or three months while the fermentation continues. He separates the liquid and sediment at least two more times.

"When it is clear, it is suitable to drink," Kluz said. "The flavor mellows the longer you let it sit. It becomes more subtle."

A five-gallon batch will make 20 750ml bottles. That's why Kalif advises beginners to start with one-gallon jugs, which produce four bottles and requires only about a quart of honey.

"The thing that separates mead from other beverages is that it is a blank palette," Kalif said. "You can have a plain honey mead or you can add blackberries, peaches, pumpkins, cranberries - really any kind of fruit."

Apple is probably the most common fruit added to mead, but Kluz is aging a batch made with raspberries. Kalif even uses tea leaves and rose petals.

Spices - cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, vanilla, even pepper - can be added to create a mead called metheglyn. Kluz won a state competition this year with his ginger-spiced mead. And mead called braggot is made by adding hops or malt.

Kluz estimates it costs about $40 for the ingredients to make five gallons of mead that will produce 20 12-ounce bottles. That's a little over $3 a bottle that would cost $10 to $12 retail.

"It takes a lot of work," Kluz said. "But it is the time and love you put into it that makes it special."

Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (2)
Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (3)
Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (4)
Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (5)
Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (6)
Mead 101: What it is and how to make it (2024)

FAQs

Mead 101: What it is and how to make it? ›

Mead Making 101

How to make mead 101? ›

Making Mead - basic method
  1. Mix honey and water together in a container of choice, whether that be bucket or demijohn.
  2. Add mead yeast and some sort of additional nutrition to the honey water mixture. ...
  3. Fit the airlock to your vessel and wait. ...
  4. When the bubbling stops, that tells you the first fermentation is finished.
Mar 13, 2019

Why does no one drink mead anymore? ›

Why did it fall out of favor? There were some new tax laws, as well as an increased availability of West Indian sugar in the 17th century that made honey harder and less necessary to obtain. But it was also the rise of other alcohols—namely beer and wine—that really did it in.

How much honey do I need for 5 gallons of mead? ›

A typical mead batch consists of 15 pounds of honey for a 5 gallon mead batch. In this example, you have 3 pounds of honey per gallon of must, so your potential alcohol by volume is about 15%.

Is mead easy to make? ›

Mead is the easiest, and very likely the most ancient, simply because it doesn't really take a lot to actually make it ferment. Mead will ferment on its own using wild yeast. There are ways to make it ferment longer, and make it more alcoholic, and give it all kinds of different flavors.

What are the three ingredients in a mead? ›

Honey should be the main ingredient in Mead. It is what makes Mead...well... Mead! Traditionally, REAL mead is made with three simple ingredients: water, yeast, and by far the most important ingredient, Honey!

What is mead called now? ›

Today, mead is often referred to as 'honey wine' because the process of making mead and wine are so similar. The key difference is the use of honey rather than grapes as a source of sugar.

Why is mead unpopular? ›

Chief among the reasons for mead's lapse in popularity is it was very difficult to make compared to other boozy options. Collecting honey meant dealing with bees in a time when equipment to do so safely barely existed. Harvesting wheat to brew beer or grapes to make wine was less complicated.

Why did we stop making mead? ›

Prior to the 1700s, mead was a popular choice of drink. However, coming into the 18th century, it fell out of favor for drinks like beer and fruit wines, as these drinks were cheaper to make and the ingredients were more readily available to common households.

How long should I let my mead ferment? ›

Keep fermentation temps up to around 70° or 75° F. Fermentation should last between 10 to 20 days. Rack into a conditioning vessel and bulk age for 3 to 6 months. Bottle, then enjoy now and again to see how it's progressing.

What type of honey makes the best mead? ›

Many manufacturers of high-quality mead prefer to use orange blossom honey because it imparts a refreshing citrus flavor to the mead. It's also a great base product which can be experimented with endlessly by adding some distinct subtle flavors to it.

Can you use regular yeast to make mead? ›

Any yeast will ferment honey and water into mead, but each strain has its own unique flavor profile, alcohol tolerance, and temperature preference. Although a few mead yeasts are sold commercially, most mead-makers use wine yeast. You can also use brewer's yeast, ale yeast, or even bread yeast.

Does mead need to ferment in the dark? ›

Your mead will need a cool, dark place to ferment for the next 30 days.

How long should mead be aged? ›

Traditional meads usually require six months to 2 years for the flavors to mellow and smooth and any off flavors to diminish. Melomels or fruit meads can take six months to 5 years for the flavors to fully integrate and the tannins and acids to mellow. Metheglin or spiced meads are quicker, six months to a year.

What is the best yeast for mead making? ›

Lalvin D-47

This white wine yeast is the primary choice for many mead makers. It ferments at a moderate to fast pace with little foaming and is good for medium to dry meads. It tends to accentuate the honey characteristics so it is a good choice for traditional varietal mead.

What is needed to start making mead? ›

To make a standard five gallon batch of traditional mead (which yields about 25 standard wine bottles) here are the ingredients you will need to gather:
  1. 14 pounds of honey (about 2.8 pounds per gallon). ...
  2. 4 gallons of spring water. ...
  3. 2 packets of mead or wine yeast. ...
  4. 5 tsp of yeast nutrient. ...
  5. 2.5 tsp of yeast energizer.

What is the ratio for making mead? ›

The ratio of water to honey depends on the type of mead you want to make. For a dry mead, the ratio is 4 parts water to 1 part honey; a sweet mead is 2 to 1. Kluz likes his mead sweet, so he typically uses 1 3/4 gallons of honey and tops it off with 3 1/4 gallons of water.

How long should you ferment mead? ›

Keep fermentation temps up to around 70° or 75° F. Fermentation should last between 10 to 20 days. Rack into a conditioning vessel and bulk age for 3 to 6 months. Bottle, then enjoy now and again to see how it's progressing.

How do you make high proof mead? ›

Using Enough Honey/High Enough Gravity

The first step of having a high abv mead is that you'll need enough honey, or other type of sugar, in order to bring the gravity up enough so that your yeast has enough to chew through. If you don't have enough sugars in your brew, it simply can't make enough alcohol.

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