Thems are premium grits out in Rutherford county.
No thots out there. Not enough traffic; no attention.
Are you using a wine or a beer yeast?Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 8:52 amAs far as equipment, you can get a fermentation kit for about $50. Just get one for making wine, since mead is essentially a "honey wine".
Equipment can start building up from there. You probably will eventually want larger carboys to move to 5 gallon batches. For aging, you might want to get oak barrels.
Most meaderies, if they purchase yeast, I think use wine yeast (which is what I did), but I want to get to the point where I maintain my own local yeast culture.Montegriffo wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 11:29 amAre you using a wine or a beer yeast?Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 8:52 amAs far as equipment, you can get a fermentation kit for about $50. Just get one for making wine, since mead is essentially a "honey wine".
Equipment can start building up from there. You probably will eventually want larger carboys to move to 5 gallon batches. For aging, you might want to get oak barrels.
What % alcohol are you aiming for?
My brewing experience is mostly in beer but my dad was a prolific hedgerow wine maker.
It has been a while but from memory 4.4lbs of sugar made 40 pints of ale at around 6 or 7%.
Honey may make stronger ale per lb though.
If you want anything stronger than that you need a wine yeast. The yeast which gets the highest strength is champagne yeast which can go up to a maximum of 17% before the alcohol kills it.
I think mead was brewed more as an ale in medieval Britain.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 11:37 amMost meaderies, if they purchase yeast, I think use wine yeast (which is what I did), but I want to get to the point where I maintain my own local yeast culture.Montegriffo wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 11:29 amAre you using a wine or a beer yeast?Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 8:52 amAs far as equipment, you can get a fermentation kit for about $50. Just get one for making wine, since mead is essentially a "honey wine".
Equipment can start building up from there. You probably will eventually want larger carboys to move to 5 gallon batches. For aging, you might want to get oak barrels.
What % alcohol are you aiming for?
My brewing experience is mostly in beer but my dad was a prolific hedgerow wine maker.
It has been a while but from memory 4.4lbs of sugar made 40 pints of ale at around 6 or 7%.
Honey may make stronger ale per lb though.
If you want anything stronger than that you need a wine yeast. The yeast which gets the highest strength is champagne yeast which can go up to a maximum of 17% before the alcohol kills it.
You can make mead strong as fuck if you want to. Most of the stuff you buy is comparable to wine because most of America still has that state liquor thing going on.
It's the same with ales. They usually cap out around here (commercially) at around 7-8%, I think, because going too high means it gets license as liquor and then you have to go through state distribution. This is one of those areas where I would fall squarely inline with Fife in burning it all down.
I'm not a whisky drinker but I have toured the port caves in Oporto (Portugal) a couple of times and I wouldn't rule out doing it again.
The smell of the barrel warehouses was amazing! I wouldn't be surprised if that port was in bourbon barrels. One of the oddities of US booze law is they require bourbon to be made in virgin oak barrels, so they get used once and sold off to other markets. I think some wineries scrape and re-char them, others consider the taste added value. I know Dalwhinnie used port barrels for some of their whiskey.Montegriffo wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 3:50 pmI'm not a whisky drinker but I have toured the port caves in Oporto (Portugal) a couple of times and I wouldn't rule out doing it again.
The smell, as you walk through cellars full of port aging in oak barrels, is awesome.