Tasting Tuesday, er, Sunday: Mead #2 Tasting Notes

We’ve been drinking some of the mead that I bottled a few weeks ago. Somehow we have very little left of Mead #2. It’s not because it’s necessarily so yummy, but because I said it was OK to drink some of #2. We didn’t make that much in the first place. And we’ve stored the bottles in a place that’s probably too convenient.

I want to keep one bottle unopened for later, but until then we’re accidentally on the second-to-last bottle. So I better do some serious tasting notes on this one for future reference.

I still haven’t yet found my notes on the recipes for each batch, but if I had to go by taste alone I’d say that this is the one that was partly based on Joe’s Ancient Orange Mead. I didn’t follow that recipe exactly because, in general, I hardly ever follow recipes exactly.

I suspect batch #2 is based on Joe’s Ancient Orange Mead (JAOM, JAO, or AO) because I detect a few notes of mild orange and cloves. I remember going really easy on the cloves because I read of others who warned that the cloves can easily overpower the mead if you’re not careful. It’s much easier to add more cloves later if you want. I know that to be true from cloves in lengthy tea steepings.

The aroma is faintly of honey and wine and slightly fruity. There may be just the very faintest hint of a rubbery smell.

The taste is of unsweet mild honey with just a hint of orange and spice. It is slightly tangy and a little bit bitter. Dave describes it as watered down honey with orange peels that have been soaked in water for a week and then some pure alcohol added. I think he partly finds it to be “watered down” because of the overall lack of sweetness.

The color is light golden topaz and beautifully clear. I added a bit of buckwheat honey to all of the batches — some more than others — so the color of each is darker than if I’d used a pure orange blossom honey.

I’d say it’s somewhat lacking in body.

Like all our batches to date this one is quite dry. Nearly all sugar has fermented out, so this doesn’t have the traditional sweetness of mead. I’d guess it to be between 14% and 18% alcohol. It’s not so much that you taste it, but it has the mouthfeel of a stronger wine and we can feel it in our toes after drinking a fairly small amount of it. I definitely feel it more than a 12% wine. I notice a bit of a burn after it goes down.

As I wrote above, if I try really hard I can detect a bit of that burnt rubber smell and taste, so I think this is the one that smelled strongly of rubber at one point. I’m not even 100% sure if it’s still there. If I hadn’t been specifically trying to smell it then I probably wouldn’t notice that at all. It is really faint now, and nothing like what it was at about six months old. So this is definitely something to remember about how much mead can change as it ages.

The pH is about 3.2 based on a traditional science kit pH strip. With that strip I have to do a little guessing based on the color since the chart doesn’t have tenths. The pH strips made specifically for the fermentation process read about 3.1 to 3.2. These strips are much easier to read down to a specific pH for home fermentation. It’s good to see the consistency between the two.

I’m attempting to back-sweeten this second-to-last bottle since I don’t have much of anything else to play with for batch #2. Back-sweetening is when you add a sweetener after the fermentation. This adds, well, sweetness. I’ll be adding some wildflower honey.

Different strains of yeasts have differing levels of alcohol tolerance, so it’s one of several things that can make a difference in the dryness or sweetness of your creation. In making wine or mead, the yeast will die off once the alcohol reaches a certain level, so there can be sugar left over. With some yeasts, if you don’t have too much overall sugar (from honey or other) some yeasts just keep eating the sugar until there’s nothing left. Red Star Premier Cuvee may keep going until it reaches 18% alcohol, but that’s fairly high. I used Cuvee in at least one batch and Cote des Blanc (lower tolerance) in another. My notes would tell me which was which. Fermentation stops once it has reached the yeast’s alcohol tolerance level or all the sugar has been converted to alcohol.

If I add honey or other sugars to bottled mead there a risk of restarting the fermentation. Too much of that and the bottles can explode. A little bit and the mead (or wine or cider) can become bubbly or carbonated. It’s a very tricky balance. Bubbles are a good thing with cider, but I have no desire for sparkling mead for now. There are additives you can put in each bottle to prevent fermentation from happening, but I’d like to keep our additives to a minimum.

I blended about two tablespoons of a flavorful wildflower honey to about 440 ml of dry mead. This was more than enough to sweeten it. In fact, I could have done with less. The pH with the added honey reads more of a 3.2 to 3.3. The pH strip is only the slightest hint darker.

This honey gave the mead much more of a traditional sweetness with lots of honey aroma and flavor. I still notice a bit of very mild orange and a hint of spice with a little bitterness. The finish is tangy.

Back sweetening with honey has made the mead a wee cloudy, but that might settle out if we left it for a while or get worse if fermentation starts up again.

There’s a huge difference in the body of the mead. I’d definitely try this again when we want a sweeter mead. This is actually pretty yummy stuff.

I like dry mead more than I thought I would, but I’d also like to try making a sweeter mead that I don’t have to back sweeten.

Overall I think we’re fairly happy with this mead. I’d like to try a similar version again in the future.

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Slow Mead

In May of 2012 we started trying to make our own mead. We made three separate batches, all done around the same time, but done differently — different types of honey, different additives, slightly different overall process.

Letting it sit for a while and tasting it at various stages, we FINALLY bottled it today. Talk about taking our time! Mead takes a long time, so maybe this is somewhat appropriate.

The clarity of the mead has been quite good for a while, and we’ve been meaning to bottle it. I think I purchased the bottles over a year ago. I may have left some of the mead on some of the lees (yeast carcasses at the bottom) too long, but we’ll see. I wouldn’t say that any of the batches are fantastic yet, but they say some stronger meads can take 2-3 years and up before they’re really good …

At an earlier taste test one of the batches had a distinct sort of rubber aroma which was quite yucky. I’m pleased to say that wackiness has aged out completely. Whew! Just goes to show how important it is to age mead.

One of the batches, batch #1 as it would happen, was pretty good at the six month mark, but we decided to let it go longer as mead is supposed to take a while to age properly. At that time I made some cyser because I wanted to try something that was quicker. The cyser was not bad. I still have one bottle of it. I kind of wish I saved two. Oh well.

Mead batch #1, the one that was a fairly nice at six months, has lost nearly all of its sweetness now. In fact, I’d have to say the same for all three batches — all dry and not really sweet at all. I guess that’s somewhat to be expected. Maybe.

Two of the batches taste fairly strong now. As I didn’t own a hydrometer when I started the mead (kicking myself), I don’t know the actual alcohol content. I can guess, however, and if I compare to other known beverages, I’d guess these are the high end of what the yeast tolerated, maybe 14%? Maybe 16%? 18%? Ack.

I REALLY wish I could find my notes. I HAVE them. Somewhere. That would tell my the exact type of yeast I used and the recipe for each of these batches.

I don’t mind the dryer mead. It’s has a beautiful aroma. One of the batches tastes close to a dry white wine. Not bad, but it’s not really the traditional mead that I was going for either. Two of the batches seem a little strong, a bit like firewater. So maybe this stuff is good for dry mead that just needs to age a bit more. Um, don’t know.

I think I’ll leave all to age longer except for the two bottles that didn’t get filled all the way. Those are free game for experimentation! I’ll get out my mad scientist/mixologist hat. I may try back sweetening a bit to get more of the sweeter honey-mead flavor that I’m used to. Maybe I’ll add a bit of acid to one of the batches as it seems a little flat. And I need to find those notes.

Upturned Noses and Glasses and Buns

The Daily Post’s Daily Prompt is Upturned Noses which asks:

Even the most laid back and egalitarian among us can be insufferable snobs when it comes to coffee, music, cars, beer, or any other pet obsession where things have to be just so. What are you snobbish about?

I like to try a lot of different foods, so maybe I’m snobbish about that. I don’t quite understand people who refuse to try something new. “What do you mean you won’t try the eel scaloppine with fried mealworms in peanut butter sauce?”

I can probably be snobbish about tea and maybe mead and some kinds of food. Except that, really, I’ll still drink or enjoy just about any kind.

I adore good tea — perfect jasmine green infused with the scent of actual blossoms, not just added flavoring. That’s snobbery talk right there. A Greener oolong that has matured into a delicate floral or a darker robust oolong from Taiwan. Yum! New Darjeeling you think is great? I’ll try that too.

I like a good basic mead — Chaucer’s the kind we can get at our local Renaissance Festival and elsewhere is certainly enjoyable. Fox Hill Special Reserve which is made with a darker honey has a bit of bitterness and a lot of depth. Some Redstone Mountain Mead can be impressive too. It’s real mead made in small batches — some can be bitter and some wonderful. They even date the batches, so you’ll want to get more of the same date if you like a batch. That’s mead for a mead snob for sure.

Unless I’m allergic, it could poison me, or it’s a dish that exhibits unusual cruelty, I’ll usually try any kind of food. I read about a Japanese dish called Ikizukuri where live fish is sliced and served still moving. I think I’ll avoid that, thanks.

But I do love to taste a variety of new things! I love gourmet dishes that have the perfect balance of flavors, colors, and textures, but I also love hot dogs from gas stations that have been roasting on those metal rollers for hours thus reducing water content and enhancing flavors. You do not know a good hot dog if you turn your nose up at those things. So maybe that’s makes me a hot dog snob. Is it wrong to have a hot dog with my beautiful jasmine tea? Maybe. The darker oolong would probably be better with hot dogs.

Got Mead

We still like mead which is more or less wine made from honey instead of grapes. I’d been thinking we should give Redstone Mountain Mead another try for a couple of reasons.
A.) Now that the Mead we’re making ourselves has aged a bit, I’m really struck by how much difference time has made to each batch and how different each batch is. I couldn’t help but wonder if the bitterness from the April 13, 2011 batch might not have aged out. The honey has me more more curious too as honey can vary quite a bit from batch to batch even within the same variety.
B.) I think I’m starting to get a feel for the taste of real Mead, not just bottles labeled “Mead” that contain a host of other flavoring agents to appeal to the masses with fruity, tart, candy-like flavors. The Redstone Mountain Mead from April 13, 2011 was probably the closest to real Mead of what I purchased at Total Wine in the past.*
C.) Mead is generally yummy.
D.) The colbalt blue bottles are beautiful and we can reuse each one we empty. It’s a tough job to empty them, but somebody’s got to do it. 😉 (See #C. above.)

I’d been wanting to give Redstone Mountain Mead another chance since the April 13, 2011 batch was somewhat bitter and wasn’t what we were hoping for at the time. The more I learn about Mead the more I realize how many different factors can affect the flavor causing bitterness or off-tastes. Redstone bottles are dated — each batch, unique. We might get more of the same or not. Only one way to know for sure … Next we purchased the August 15, 2011 bottle and we were really impressed this time.

August 15, 2011 was delightful with a pleasant, distinct honeycomb taste. Sweet without being sickeningly so. The bitter aftertaste of the April 13 batch was absent. While Aug 15 didn’t have the deep, dark taste of Fox Hill, Special Reserve, it was overall just a really yummy classic Mead taste with enough depth to make it interesting. Pleasant all around with no funny tastes and none of that bitterness. The color was a more golden than white wine, but not at all brown.

I went back to Total Wine hoping to get a bit more and actually found a November batch instead. I’m guessing there are a few other folks out there who found the August batch appealing.

I’m going to check around for more August, but in the meantime I purchased a November bottle as well as a Redstone Black Raspberry Nectar. We’ll try those next. Black Raspberry Nectar is something we hadn’t seen at Total Wine before, and according to the Redstone website, it’s their most popular mead. It’s a melomel which means it’s made from honey and fruit. It’s carbonated and at only 8% alcohol content I expect it to taste fairly mild and perhaps a little wine-cooler-ish. I’m hoping it has more depth and natural flavor than coolers.

We recently went to a SodaStream House Party and that has me wondering more about carbonation. I don’t think I want my mead to be carbonated, but with fruity flavors it could work. I like cider or cysers carbonated. I’m guessing a SodaStream wouldn’t work well for this kind of beverage, though, I might do a little research.

*Chaucer’s Mead, while yummy, tastes a little too consistent to be just plain classic mead. I think there’s got to be more processing going on for the consistency of taste and aroma. What we’ve had over the years is much like it’s always been. Don’t get me wrong, still yummy with a distinct honey flavor and aroma, but not the depth and unique character of an unprocessed, unadulterated mead.

We Feel the Need for Mead

So I thought I might start adding some of our mead notes to the blog.

Mead is wine made from fermenting a combination of honey and water instead of grape or other fruit juice. Several months ago we were at Mad Fox Brewing Company in Falls Church where we had an especially wonderful mead called Fox Hill, Special Reserve. They had another also lovely mead, Fox Hill, Ginger-Apricot. The Ginger-Apricot was lighter and closer to the Chaucer’s mead we’ve had in the past both at home and at the Maryland Renaissance Festival. The Special Reserve was a dryer, amber-colored mead which tasted like darker honeys–full-flavored, deep, wild tasting. This is the one that really got our attention.

I headed over to Total Wine and More. This seemed like a good place to start looking for the Fox Hill mead offerings or any other mead offerings beside Chaucer’s. Trader Joe’s sometimes carries that already. Don’t get me wrong, I like Chaucer’s fine, but the Fox Hill at Mad Fox was a whole ‘nother level of mead, and it started us on a quest for what else is out there.

Sadly, we didn’t find Fox Hill at Total Wines. There were others. Though, not as many varieties as I’d hoped considering how many wines they carry. But at least it’s a start. We’ve tasted three additional meads so far and begun fermenting our own.

First the store-purchased meads. Along with the very traditional Chaucer’s we’ve tried Redstone, Oliver, and Carroll’s Mead.

Redstone Mountain Mead was the first we tried. It comes in a colbalt blue bottle with an EZ-cap. This kind of cap is made of porcelain with a rubber gasket and metal spring clamps to hold it on tight. The label shows the brew date, which I really like. April 13, 2011 in the case of that bottle. The ingredient list is there and simple with just Orange Blossom Honey, Wildflower Honey, Spring Water, Montrachet yeast, and “The Love!.” The website does indeed show an entertaining love of mead. The mead itself was kind of disappointing. This was the first we tried other than Chaucer’s and Fox Hill, so perhaps we were being too hard on it at the time. I want to get another bottle and try it again. Redstone Mountain mead had a nice aroma, sweet honey taste, but a bitter aftertaste which neither of us cared for. Drinkable, yes. But that bitter taste got to us. Reading more about meads over the past several months, I wonder if the bitter taste might not age out. The bottles are great since we can clean, sanitize, and use them to bottle our own mead when we get to that step. So I think we should at least try it again at some point.

Oliver Camelot Mead comes in a beautiful bottle. Flowers are painted on the back and they shine like a gem through the clear, colorless bottle and light mead. There’s a bee molded into the glass of the bottle. It would make a lovely gift and look pretty sitting on a counter or table. The mead inside is very light. I have to say, Dave ended up drinking most of this one. So for more specific tasting notes, I should probably try it again. It was light in color and flavor with honey notes. It was missing the bitter aftertaste of Redstone. But it didn’t have the depth and honey flavor of Fox Hill or even Chaucer’s.

Carroll’s Mead has a less-than-elegant label with their name in large, heavy black lettering, a big Scottish coat of arms, and the words “Sweet Honey Wine” at the bottom. The bottle is plain, clear, and, we discovered at home, screw top. Not exactly wowing us, but we gave it a try as the price wasn’t bad for a mead and ya never know. The Carroll’s Mead website says that it’s the official mead of the NY Renaissance Faire. It must be good! We’ll I’m glad we live closer to the Maryland Renaissance Festival. Carroll’s Mead tastes more like a wine cooler than mead. It isn’t yucky. It just doesn’t taste much like honey wine. If I really focus on trying to taste the honey I get a few faint notes, but otherwise they must add some flavoring agents like citric or maltic acid. It’s a tart, fruity beverage with an alcohol content of about 8% which, in my mind, makes it more cooler than much of anything else. Probably well-liked by folks who don’t care for regular wine or who appreciate the refreshing, tart-fruity taste of a Bartles and Jaymes.

Chaucer’s Honey Mead is one we’ve had many times at the Maryland Renaissance Festival and it’s part of what I enjoy about going there. It’s a sweet dessert wine with a light clear color and lovely honey flavor. Not the amazing depth and flavor of Fox Hill, Special Reserve or even quite as good as Fox Hill, Ginger-Apricot, but still a really good, classic dessert mead that tastes like mead.