Mead - 5 Things You Need to Know (And a Recipe) (2024)

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Mead may be the world's oldest alcoholic beverage. Many modern versions are just for enjoyment, but we'll show you why (and how) to brew old school (naturally fermented) mead.

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Why naturally fermented? Beyond the unique flavor possibilities of wild ferments, they also have probiotic and potential medicinal qualities. In a world where antibiotic resistant bacteria are becoming a growing problem, our old ally and “drink of the gods” may come to our rescue again.

Read on…

What is mead?

Mead is an alcoholic beverage where the majority of the sugar for the alcoholic ferment comes from honey. Alcohol content varies from around 4% to over 20% alcohol by volume, depending on the type of yeast, ingredients and aging.

Although sometimes called honey wine, mead is a separate class of beverage. Some companies sell white grape wine with added honey and call it “honey wine”, so make sure you check the label.

It's believed the first honey ferments were likely accidental, resulting from wild yeast fermented honey water. The drink was enjoyed by the Norse, Ancient Greek, Africans and Chinese.

Norse legends about the origin of the drink involve Odin, dwarves, and a war between the gods. Archaeological finds in China contained residue a mixed beverage of rice, honey and fruit dated back to 9,000 years ago.

Mead Can Taste Like Beer or Wine or an Entirely Different Beverage

Most commercial meads taste more like wine – with a kick. There are sweet and dry options,and recipes with added fruit or herbs. If you find you don't care for your first taste, try another type.

Once you get into home fermentation, there's a lot more variation. If you drink your brew young, it tastes more like beer or sparkling cider. It also has a lower alcohol content, making the mug an acceptable serving vessel, versus a wine glass for older brews.

Which brings us to…

How soon can you drink it?

A basic small mead can be ready to drink in ten to fourteen days. Aged brews are ready in six months to a year, or longer.

What are the different types of mead?

There are many different varieties of mead, including sweet, semi-sweet and dry meads. Those fermented with fruit are called melomels. A honey/apple juice ferment is called cyser. Metheglins have spices added.

Honey ferments also include honey beers, grog, T'ej and ale.

It's Legal to Brew at Home

Although you can't sell your brew, it's legal to brew and consume mead in most areas. (This also applies to beers and homemade wines.) Distilled spirits commonly require special permits and/or licenses.

Is mead good for your health?

Long term readers may remember the article “Honey as Medicine”, in which we discussed the use of honey for healing wounds and preventing infection. When fermented, it creates a potent probiotic beverage.

A 2006 study of tej (Ethopia honey wine) found large numbers of Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeasts, which have a probiotic effect, make nutrients easier to absorb, provide folate, and protect from mycotoxins.

See “Beneficial Effects of Probiotic and Food Borne Yeasts on Human Health“. The study also found high amounts of Lactobacillus species bacteria, which have been shown to reduce the severity and duration of illness.

Scientists in Sweden launched a mead called Honey Hunter’s Elixir. In the article “Honey-based mead may curb antibiotic resistance, say makers”, one of the scientists notes:

“Well, we’ve seen in our research that the honey bees actually add great flora of lactic acid bacteria in honey so the mead, when produced, is actually fermented by these lactic acid bacteria together with wild yeasts and the lactic acid bacteria can really kill off all the dangerous pathogens that are even resistant against antibiotics.

So our thinking is that the mead, these (antibacterial substances in) lactic acid bacteria in the drink can actually be transferred to your blood and help you when you are infected with dangerous bacteria or promote health, preventing infections,”

If you combine healing herbs with the probiotic benefits of honey, it's a one-two punch.

Note – the probiotic health benefits of mead only apply to brews are not pasteurized or chemically treated to kill off microbes. Natural ferments appear to add extra benefits compared to commercial yeast strains.

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Basic Semi-Sweet Mead Recipe

This traditional mead recipe is adapted from “Make Mead Like a Viking: Traditional Techniques for Brewing Natural, Wild-Fermented, Honey-Based Wines and Beers“.

The author, Jereme Zimmerman, describes himself as a “writer and traditional brewing revivalist”. He gives presentations around Pacific Northwest.

Equipment needed:

  • 2-3 gallon wide-mouthed ceramic, glass or food-grade plastic fermentation vessel. (Don't use metal, as honey is mildly acidic.)
  • Wooden spoon
  • Heavy duty cheesecloth or flour sack to cover the ferment

If you wish to age your brew, you'll need:

  • 1 gallon carboy with airlock
  • Siphoning tube
  • Wine bottles (and corker) or bail-top bottles

Brewing Tips

Clean all equipment thoroughly, and practice food sanitation practices. You can use products made for cleaning brewing supplies, but hot, soapy water and a clean rinse will get the job done.

Don't overheat your water or honey! If you boil or pasteurize ingredients, you kill off the wild yeasts. Gently warming honey to help it dissolve is fine. Think “no warmer than bath water”.

To give mead body, it needs nutrients (sugars), tannin and acid. Citrus fruit is a good source of acid. The raisins in this recipe add nutrients, tannin and wild yeasts. Oak leaves or grape leaves also add tannin.

As you learn, you can experiment with other ingredients – or buy a good guide book – or both. Endless flavor variations are possible with flowers, herb, fruits, vegetables and spices. You can even make mushroom mead!

Keep your fermentation vessel tightly covered when you are not stirring, especially if fruit flies and ants are around. They love sweet ferments. I have old headbands that I use to hold down my flour sack towel, but any strap or tie will do. (Read here for more on ant and fruit fly control.)

If you want carbonated mead, use heavy duty champagne bottles or swing-top bottles. They are designed to handle pressure build up. Regular wine bottles are fine if fermentation is finished before bottling. (See Notes in recipe below.)

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Basic Semi-Sweet Mead

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Print Recipe

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A lightly sweet, naturally fermented mead, perfect for the beginning home brewer.

  • Author: Laurie Neverman

Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • 23 pounds (about one quart or .9 to 1.3 kg) raw, unfiltered local honey
  • 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of clean, non-chlorinated water
  • 810 raisins
  • A couple of squeezes of a lemon or orange

Instructions

  1. Mix water and honey in your wide-mouthed fermenting vessel. Stir until dissolved.
  2. Stir in raisins and citrus juice.
  3. Cover your fermenting vessel and set it in a warm (60-80F, 15-27C) location, out of direct sunlight.
  4. Stir the brew vigorously for a few minutes, several times per day.
  5. Within three to five days, you should see signs of fermentation. The mead will be bubbly and fizz slightly after stirring.
  6. Continue regular stirring for a couple more days, then strain and transfer the brew into a carboy with airlock.
  7. Drink the mead in a week or two if you like it young and sweet with less alcohol (5-6%).
  8. For a stronger mead (10-12%), rack the mead after a month, and then one or two more times over the next six months. Consume at six months, or bottle and age the mead for a year or more.
  9. To age, place bottles on their side in a cool location, such as a cellar.

Notes

To test mead to see if it's safe to bottle, add a half teaspoon of sugar or a bit of honey and swirl the carboy. If it causes a strong reaction, the mead is not ready to bottle. Meads bottled a bit young in a thick bottle will be carbonated, but if not done with care, you risk popped corks or bottle bombs.

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January 2021 note: We sampled the mead at six weeks (photo in mug above), 6 months, and 18 months. It was excellent all three times.

At first, it's sweet and bubbly, more like a wine cooler. At 6 months, it was less sweet, but still lightly effervescent. By 18 months, it was drier, but still had just a hint of bubbles. Lovely stuff!

More Information on Natural Fermentation

We have a wide range of recipes and book reviews on the site, including:

  • Wild Yeast Brewing – Books About Wild Beer, Wine, Mead and More – this post has great references for medicinal brews and making a starter with wild yeast to help ensure a successful ferment.
  • Brew Beer Like a Yeti – Techniques and Traditional Recipes – also by Jereme Zimmerman
  • How to Make Kombucha – the ever so slightly alcoholic drink that's been gaining popularity in healthy lifestyle circles.

For a demonstration of bottling your honey wine, you can watch the video below. We bottled pear wine, but the technique is the same.

Or watch on youtube.

Mead - 5 Things You Need to Know (And a Recipe) (2024)

FAQs

What all do you need to make mead? ›

In terms of making mead, you need at least these three ingredients: Honey, Water, and yeast. Everything after that is icing on the cake, and helps give mead further versatility.

What not to put in mead? ›

Preservatives will impede or prevent fermentation. Likewise with bottled juices or frozen fruit juice, look out for Potassium Sorbate, a preservative that will prevent fermentation. If using juice, use pure juice. Added sugar in commercial juices can add strange flavors.

How long should 5 gallons of mead ferment? ›

Keep fermentation temps up to around 70° or 75° F. Fermentation should last between 10 to 20 days. Rack into a conditioning vessel and bulk age for 3 to 6 months. Bottle, then enjoy now and again to see how it's progressing.

How much fruit do I need for 5 gallons of mead? ›

There really isn't a rule of thumb saying, “Add 3 lbs of every type of fruit to get a light flavor and 6 lbs of any fruit to get heavier flavor”. Different fruit gives different amounts of flavor. That is why this is so helpful. All of these additions would take place in Secondary and all are for 5 gallons of mead.

How long do you leave mead to ferment? ›

Mead can take longer to ferment than hard cider or beer, depending on the ambient temperature it will take anywhere from 3-6 weeks. I usually give it 5-6 weeks before bottling to be on the safe side, as you don't want any broken bottle explosions! I've definitely had some very champagne like mead before.

How long does 1 gallon of mead take to ferment? ›

The fermenting process depends on various factors, like temperature, the amount of honey, the type of yeast, and the presence of additives and nutrients. Depending on how active the yeast is, it will take around 2 to 6 weeks.

Why does no one drink mead anymore? ›

Why did it fall out of favor? There were some new tax laws, as well as an increased availability of West Indian sugar in the 17th century that made honey harder and less necessary to obtain. But it was also the rise of other alcohols—namely beer and wine—that really did it in.

How long should you leave fruit in mead? ›

Remove the fruit bag after about 7–14 days, or rack the mead away from the fruit to a second fermenter. Leaving the fruit in too long can result in flavor and haze issues.

How long do you leave berries in mead? ›

Pour the fruit puree into the fermentation jar. Rack the mead from the carboy to the fermentation jar, taking care to leave as much lees as possible at the bottom of the carboy. Place the lid on the jar and refrigerate for 1 to 2 weeks.

How long after bottling mead can you drink it? ›

For example, unopened classic mead can last for 5 years, while unopened lighter meads usually last 1-2 years. Once opened, however, mead's shelf-life decreases, especially for lighter meads. It is usually recommended to consume lighter mead within 24 hours of opening.

Can you add too much yeast to mead? ›

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It is possible to add too much yeast, but that usually takes on the order of 10 to 20 times more than the recommended amount, so using one packet designed for a 5 gallon batch in a 1 gallon batch is not an issue. In general, more yeast is actually better, at least at first.

How long should mead age before drinking? ›

Traditional meads usually require six months to 2 years for the flavors to mellow and smooth and any off flavors to diminish. Melomels or fruit meads can take six months to 5 years for the flavors to fully integrate and the tannins and acids to mellow. Metheglin or spiced meads are quicker, six months to a year.

How often should I stir my mead? ›

Stirring twice a day is generally sufficient (if you have a fast fermentation, you might want to stir three or four times a day). Stirring does a couple of things: It blows off carbon dioxide, which lowers potential yeast stress, and it adds oxygen to your mead when the yeast can use it best.

Can you use sugar instead of honey in mead? ›

Honey itself then becomes the source of 'sugar' for the yeast to consume and make alcohol. There is no problem adding sugar to mead as it ferments, other than it may alter the flavour of the mead to a degree, if it's anything other than what you started with.

Why does no one sell mead? ›

Mead Distribution Problems

Because it doesn't really fit neatly into any current category of American alcohol, it's tough for many pubs and liqueur stores to obtain permission to sell it. That is, if they've ever even heard of it. One of the best things about mead's revival is that it comes straight from us.

Do I need a starter for mead? ›

For meads, we always recommend starter cultures - they help the fermentation to finish quickly and strongly.

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