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Home Main Meal mead recipe
Main Meal

mead recipe

by Mary Hopper September 5, 2022
by Mary Hopper September 5, 2022
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One Gallon Homemade Mead Recipe - Simple And Delicious

Mead was the perfect drink for vikings sailing through Scandinavia, and it's just as good today, too! With our Brewsy bags, you can make delicious mead in just 7 days. Learn how to make mead with this super easy one-gallon mead recipe. 

Provided by: SmallRecipe.com

Total time: 7 hours 15 minutes

Prep time: 15 minutes

Cook time: 7 hours

Yield: 1

Ingredients:

1 Gallon Jug
1 Large Pot
2 Tea Bags
2/3 Gallon Water
2 to 3 Cups of Honey
Brewsy Starter Kit

Steps:

Contents

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  • Gather your ingredients. 🍯For this basic mead recipe, here's what you'll need:1 Gallon Container2 to 3 cups of Honey1 Large Pot1-2 Tea Bags (We recommend black tea to start — but the recipe will work with any kind of tea, and it can also be made without tea).
  • Prepare your tea. 🫖In a large pot, heat 2/3 gallon (2.5 L) of water. Then, add 1-2 teabags to the pot.Stir, and let sit for 15 minutes.
  • Add your honey. For dry mead, add 2 cups of honey (1.5 pounds).For semi-dry to semi-sweet mead, add 2.5 cups honey. (2 pounds).For sweet mead, add 3 cups of honey (2.5 pounds).
  • Dissolve your honey in the tea, and let the mixture cool until room temperature.
  • Pour your tea into your gallon jug once cooled.
  • Add one full Brewsy bag. Then shake vigorously for 30 seconds to help wake up the yeast.
  • Put on the airlock. First, squeeze the rubber stopper into your gallon’s bottleneck, and then attach the plastic airlock. Fill the airlock with water, and then snap the hole-punched plastic part back on.
  • Put your mead in a warm, dark place. An attic, closet, or near your water heater are all good places. The ideal temperature is 75°F to 85°F. (The fermentation will take longer in cooler temperatures).Now, fermentation is beginning. Fermentation will take approximately 7 days.Tip: Once or twice a day, swirl your container to make sure the yeast make surface contact with all of the mead.
  • Wait 7 days, then taste-test. After 7 days, take a very small sip of your mead. Right now, the yeast haven’t been separated from your mead, so it won’t taste amazing just yet.When you taste, taste primarily for sweetness. If it tastes dry enough for you, move on to the next step. If it still tastes too sweet, let it ferment for 2 more days, then repeat the taste-test.
  • Put your mead in the fridge. Take off the airlock and put the hole-punched cap on your gallon jug — or, simply use a loosened cap.Tip — make sure you never fasten the cap of your gallon jug to prevent potentially explosive carbon dioxide buildup!
  • Wait two days while your mead is in the fridge.During this time, the cold in your fridge is forcing the solids in your mead to the bottom of the container, making it easier for you to separate them in the next step.
  • Rack your mead. Slowly, pour your mead off of the sediment at the bottom into a different container.Your goal is to remove as much of the sediment as possible, so try not to tip your jug back up until you’ve finished pouring.
  • Take a sip! Now, you can taste your mead! Cheers!You may love it right away, but you may find it tastes harsh or a bit off. Don’t worry! That's very normal with young alcohol. Mead takes longer to age than other drinks made with Brewsy — it will get much smoother over time.If it tastes bitter, you can quickly fix that by making a simple syrup.
  • Return your mead to the fridge with a loosened cap. Unlike store-bought wine, Brewsy doesn’t have any preservatives, so it needs to stay in the fridge with a loose cap unless it is properly prepared for room temperature storage.If you’d like to bottle your mead for storage outside of the fridge, you can find out how to do that here.
  • Age your mead. The character of your mead will change significantly as it ages. This is especially important with mead!Harsh tastes or off-flavors will dissipate, and your mead will taste smoother and more flavorful. Age your mead for at least 3 weeks, racking it about once every 5-7 days, or whenever you see significant sediment buildup.
  • Enjoy! Share your mead recipe with our Brewsy communities, the First Pour Club and Club Brewsy.And be sure to reach out to us with any questions. You can text us at the number we texted you from about your order, message us on Facebook, or send us an email at hello@getbrewsy.com.

Nutrition Facts:

ServingSize 1 Gallon, Calories 99

How To Make Spiced Mead - 5 Best Recipes You Need To Try ...

This mead recipe by Joe Mattioli, the well-renowned mead maker who has created numerous award-winning meads, is ideal for beginners who would like to try brewing mead for the first time. This recipe is for preparing one gallon of mead. If you’d like to make larger batches, you need to scale up the ingredients, making sure they are in the same proportions.

Provided by: SmallRecipe.com

Total time: 2 hours

Prep time: 2 hours

Yield: 1-10

Ingredients:

3 ½ lbs. Honey
1 gal Water
1 Large orange
1 Small handful of raisins
1 Stick of cinnamon
1 Whole clove
A pinch of nutmeg and allspice (optional)
1 tsp. Fleischmann’s bread yeast

Steps:

  • Dissolve the honey in warm water.
  • Pour the dissolved honey into a clean one-gallon carboy.
  • Rinse the orange thoroughly to remove any pesticide before slicing it in eights (or smaller). Then put them inside the carboy, rinds included.
  • Add in raisins, clove, cinnamon stick, and other optional ingredients.
  • Fill the glass jug up to three inches from the top with cold water. The extra space will provide room for some foam.
  • Put the cap on and shake the carboy to aerate the mixture.
  • After checking and ensuring that you have room temperature (about 72 degrees Fahrenheit or 22 degrees Celsius), add one teaspoon of bread yeast to the mixture. No need to rehydrate it.
  • Swirl gently.
  • Place the fermentation airlock and put the carboy in a cool, dark place. It should start the fermentation immediately or after an hour.
  • When major foaming stops (typically, after a few days), add some water and leave it for two months and a few days until it clears and the oranges sink to the bottom of the jug.
  • Put a hose with a filter on one end into the clear part and siphon off your first home-brewed spiced mead.

Nutrition Facts:

ServingSize 1-10, Calories 84

Basic Mead Recipe | Epicurious

The mead you make with this recipe will reflect the qualities of the honey you use. Consult our guide to mead and consider using a first-rate varietal honey. Because mead is fairly high in alcohol (10- to 12-percent by volume), I recommend 12-ouncebottles over 22-ounce ones.

Provided by: SmallRecipe.com

Yield: Makes about five gallons, which should fill 53 twelve-ounce bottles.

Ingredients:

12 to 18 pounds of grade-A honey
4 1/2 gallons of tap or bottled water
8 grams (1/4 ounce) of freeze-dried wine, champagne, or dedicated mead yeast

Steps:

  • Making mead requires essentially the same basic kit necessary to brew beer at home: primary and secondary plastic-bucket fermenters with air locks and spigots, transfer hosing, a bottle-filler tube, heavy bottles, bottle caps, bottle capper, and a bottle brush and washer. You should be able to find these items for approximately $70 total (excluding the bottles) through a home-brewing supplier, such as The Home Brewery. Bottles cost from $6 to $20 per dozen, depending on style. You might instead buy a couple of cases of beer in returnable bottles, drink the beer, and  — after sanitizing them!  — reuse those bottles, for the cost of the deposit.
  • All your equipment must be sanitized or sterilized before use. Ordinary unscented household bleach does the job fine. Put all the equipment (including the lid and stirring spoons) into the fermentation bucket, fill with water, and add 2 teaspoons of unscented bleach. Let it sit for 30 minutes. Drain the water through the spigot, rinse everything in hot water, and allow to air-dry.
  • Bring the 4 1/2 gallons of water to a boil. Well water, by the way, should be avoided because of potentially high levels of strong tasting minerals like iron. Boiling should remove harsh chlorine from municipal tap water. If you don’t own a pot large enough to hold five gallons of water, boil as much as possible. You will add the remaining water to the fermenter later.
  • Once the water reaches a boil, remove it from the heat and stir in all of the honey. Do not boil the honey, as it reduces the aromatic quality of the finished mead.
  • While the honey dissolves in the water, put a cup of lukewarm (90 to 100°F) water into a clean bowl. Sprinkle in the yeast and cover the bowl with plastic wrap. When the honey has been fully dissolved in the water and the pot is cool to the touch (not over 80°F), pour the honey-water into the fermentation bucket and stir in the yeast mixture. Note: Cooling the honey-water should take about half an hour. This process can be accelerated with a so-called sink bath, that is, repeatedly immersing the pot in cold water in a sink or basin.
  • If you have not already added the full 4 1/2 gallons of water, top it off with the balance in bottled water (or tap water if you’re confident of its quality).
  • Seal the bucket and allow the mixture to ferment for two weeks to one month. The progress of fermentation can judged by monitoring the carbon-dioxide bubbles escaping from the air lock: When they drop to one bubble every sixty seconds, fermentation has nearly concluded. Note that is only an issue during this primary fermentation; secondary fermentation has more to do with aging and mellowing and hence is more flexible. When primary fermentation has subsided, siphon the mead over to your secondary fermentation bucket and seal it. Allow one to four months aging time. Do not open the fermenter, as this risks contaminating the mead.
  • When you decide it has matured enough (and the mead has cleared), you will want to siphon it into sterilized bottles and cap them. Follow the same procedure as you would for home-brewed beer. My book Beer for Dummies has a detailed guide in its Chapter Ten, or consult the web site of the American Homebrewers Association.
  • Keep in mind that this is a recipe for still (i.e., non-carbonated) mead.
  • Mead typically improves with age, so the longer you can wait to open the bottles, the better.

How to Make 1-Gallon Mead: A Guide To Small-Batch Brewing ...

For people who haven’t tried it, making mead can be intimidating. But with the proper introduction and right information, you can instantly get started with this fascinating hobby. The key is to start brewing in small batches.

Provided by: SmallRecipe.com

Total time: 2 hours

Prep time: 2 hours

Yield: 1-10

Ingredients:

3 lbs. Honey
1 gal Filtered or non-chlorinated water
½ cup Chamomile flowers
½ cup Chopped raisins
1 Vanilla bean, split
½ packet Yeast (use champagne yeast for dry mead, sweet wine, or mead yeast for sweeter mead) or 1 pinch (or 2) of bread yeast

Steps:

  • Using a stockpot, heat 2/3 gallon of water and allow it to boil.
  • Once the water is at a steady, rolling boil, remove the stockpot from the stove.
  • Add the raisins and chamomile to the water. Then, stir well. Cover the pot and let the mixture sit for about 15 minutes.
  • Uncover the pot and pour in the honey. Stir well until the honey dissolves and blends thoroughly.
  • Pour the mixture into a one-gallon carboy using a funnel. Split the vanilla bean and add it to the must.
  • Pour the remainder of the water (1/3 gallon) into the carboy to help the mixture cool down. Make sure to fill the jug up to the neck, leaving at least two inches of headspace.
  • Check the temperature of the mix. Once it cools down to room temperature, pitch the yeast.
  • Top off the jug with bung and airlock.
  • Set it aside in a cool, dark place where there is no direct sunlight.
  • Let the fermentation begin.
  • Check the airlock now and then for the bubbles. Once it stops producing bubbles and the mead has cleared, you can taste it. Either start back sweetening or prepare for bottling.
  • To back sweeten your mead, use honey or sugar to make a quarter and a half cup of sweetening syrup.
  • Put the syrup into a clean, sanitized one-gallon glass jar and rack the mead into it. Give it a gentle swirl to mix thoroughly.
  • Install a clean, sanitized airlock in the sweetened mead and let it ferment for another week or two.
  • Once the fermentation is complete (no more bubbles), you can bottle the mead.

Nutrition Facts:

ServingSize 1-10, Calories 491

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