Friday, 7 March 2014

Day five six bubbles a minute. Forty degrees outside. Fifty degrees inside

Wednesday, 5 March 2014

Day four. Eight bubbles a minute sixty five outside. Fifty five inside

I bought some yeast energizer today, if fermentation does not pick up by week two I will be adding  a half tsp to the carboy. I picked up the yeast energizer  at a local store we have here in Jackson called Brewhaha. Owner is great very knowledge about brewing beer and wines.
Day three. Seven bubbles a minute. Thirty fours degrees outside fifty five inside

Monday, 3 March 2014


Mead day two. Temp outside twenty six degrees. Temp inside forty five degrees. Airlock eight bubbles a minute 
Well when I woke up today it felt a little cooler in the room. When I took a look at my weather station monitor I saw it was thirty eight degrees outside, but still around seventy something in the room still not bad but its supposed to stay cold for a few days here not good for wine making. When I walked outside I noticed small white speak all over the steps and car. Can not be leave just yesterday it was in the eighties and I was wearing shorts. Welcome to MS don't like the weather wait five minutes. Hopefully the cool weather will not harm my mead when I get home this afternoon I will try to take a pic of the mead and try to count the bubbles per minute.
On March 2 2014 around 3am. I am woken by a ticking sound in the room with me. I finally figure out where the sound is coming from it is the air lock on my carboy. We have the start of fermentation. About nine hours after mixing the yeast with the must. Not to shabby
Recipe I used is for a Melomel witch is a mead made with fruit

ingredients  used
3 lbs wild flower honey
1 pack of d47 Lavin yest
1 tsp yeast nutrients
1 Orange
30 raisins
 1 gallon of water

Steps for putting it all together

 First things first I took all of my lose small items I could fit in the stock pot filled it with water and added 1tsp of one step sanitizer. Next  I filled the the one gallon carboy with water adding one tsp of sanitizer to it. I then let the mixture sit for twenty minutes. During this time I referred back to my book and the net for what to do next. I made one mistake with my adding of the honey. I used a pound and a half more honey then I needed. Shocker that the net failed me lol. In obtaining the correct measurements. If you ever wonder a pint of honey weighs a pound and a half so I only need two pints of honey to a gallon of water. I used four and a half. O well this is a learning process for me.

 After the 20 min wait for the sanitizer to do its job I pored a half gallon of water in my stock pot placing the other half  gallon in the freezer. Bringing the water to a rapid boil for and keeping it there for ten minutes.


While waiting the ten minutes I placed the gallon of honey in a pot of hot water to make for easy pouring. Next I took the water off the heat. Pouring in the honey and adding the yeast nutrients steering the honey with my slotted spoon so the honey did not scorch. I took the half gallon of water out of the freezer and added it to the pot bring the temp down to around one hundred and fifty for and trying to keep it there for ten minutes, this is to kill off the germs that may be in the wild honey. Stirring every so often so the honey mixes well with the water.

Next I took what now is known as a must and the stock pot placing it in the sink adding cold water to the sink until it reached almost the handles of the stock pot. This going to bring the temp of the must down to room temp a lot quicker then just leaving the put siting on the counter un covered running the risk of bugs, germs, or even wild yeast getting in the must. Also during this time I boiled two ounces of water. Then letting  it cool to  around one hundred and nine degrees. Once the water cooled to one hundred and nine or a little lower. I added my yest pack to the water letting it sit until the must finally cooled down to room temp around seventy degrees. I then removed the stock pot from the sink. Letting the water drain out. I replaced the pot with the one gallon carboy placing a funnel in the neck of the carboy and pouring the must in.

 Before adding the yeast I took a hydrometer reading by adding must to the hydrometer tube and spinning the hydrometer to release any bubbles that may have attached to the hydrometer. I still need to do a little more research on reading the hydrometer but this is a pic of the hydrometer in the must filled tube. You can see what it looks like. According to what I saw I should end up with about 16% alcohol at the end of fermentation.



Next I added the cut up orange and raisins  to the must.  I pored the yeast in the carboy shaking the carboy back and forth vigorously for five minutes adding air to the mix  the yeast needs air in order  to ferment properly. I placed the screw on top to the carboy that has a hole in the center of it for the airlock. (A airlock lets the carbon dioxide that the yest puts off  during fermentation escape, but does not let air in.)After the aeration of the must and yest the air lock is placed on the carboy. Outside air is now your wines enemy.

 

 
First attempt of mead items used one 18 quart stock pot, candy thermometer, Pyrex measuring cup, plastic measuring spoon, and large slotted sliver spoon. Most of these items I had laying around the house. Other items I bought from Northern Brewer. Two 1gal carboys with screw on lids,two airlocks, one step sanitizer, hydrometer, and a hydrometer tube.
Well the want to make mead has always been in my head. I have made wine in the past but have never tried mead(Honey Wine). Watching movies with knights  and vikings always makes the want to try my hand at making mead . Here recently I have been watching  the HBO series Game Of Thrones. I know they drank wine and beer on the show and I have not heard the mention of mead yet but its still the right time in history for mead . So I did a little research watching youtube videos I'm also reading a greatbook The Compleat Meadmaker . So bought two gallon sized carboys,  wild flower honey, and yeast and figured what the heck lets give it a try.
This blog is more set up for me to keep records of the mead recipes I attempt to make. Mistakes made and good results