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Mymead quicklinks
Mymead quicklinks













mymead quicklinks

It's like an explosion of spring.like combining a bouquet of flowers and taking a bit. The magic is breathing out of the nose after a sip. Warm in the throat but not hot at all (Im pretty picky with my cuts). Soft and silky smooth in the mouth - almost sweet tasting. I have not touched/tasted the oak yet but the white is AMAZING cut down to 40%.

mymead quicklinks mymead quicklinks

Half a gallon I left white and half a gallon I put on an inch of spiral cut med toast american oak. I cut my keeper down to 62.5 and got just over a gallon of. Aired it out for 48 hours or so and made my cuts. I then ran my spirit run slow and low, collecting in small jars. I then hooked up my corney keg thumper and combined my lows with four gallons of mead in my boiler and placed my last gallon in the thumper. I stripped fifteen gallons real fast in my keg pot still (two seven+ gallon runs). I also think waiting for it to clear will keep all the yeast out of the still which I believe makes a cleaner product.Īnyhow, I decided to combine my mead to be distilled (since i did not want to spend a millennia running each separate) while saving one gallon of each (un-mixed) to bottle in another year and experience in all its (possible) glory. But, but, why do you not drink mead as soon as it is done with the initial ferment? Because it tastes like shit! If I am going for flavor, my thinking is that I should wait for the mead to taste good (well, at least better. Now, I have done a bit of talking about this and have heard over and over that once the first fermentation is done I might as well run it since there really is no additional alcohol being produced. Fast forward a 14 month or so (read: I finally got tired of tripping over the carboys) I got around to distilling it. I then re-racked it several times as the months past and the mead begun to clear. I let it ferment in plastic for the initial and then racked into my carboys once the main action had subsided. I mixed with warm water and nutrients and then pitched with mead yeast from Wyeast when it was the right temp. I used about three pounds of honey per gallon of water (about 15 pounds per carboy if I remember right - dont have my notes handy). I kept the honey separate from each hive since it had such different flavors/colors (strange since all the hives are in my back yard fro the majority of the flower "flush" but I guess the bees from each hive will foraged in different spots). A few years ago I had an excess of honey so I made four batches of mead (in six gallon carboys). I have been catching wild swarms these last few years and giving them a nice home in my back yard in exchange for a bit o' honey from time to time (they also get loaned out to friends with fruit trees in the spring to help make fruit - in trade for some of the fruit of course). Sorry for the long post - I write this because I had been curious about doing this for a while and I wish someone else had before I started this experiment.















Mymead quicklinks