Whole Strawberry Mead

The Mead Workshop in Manchester, NH was a smashing success! Thanks again to our host, KO Bisson, and to Michael Fairbrother from Moonlight Meadery for supporting the event. The evening had a fantastic vibe to it, and there are several new meadmakers in the world.

As part of the event, I demonstrated how to make a batch of mead. Strawberries are in season now, and last year’s Strawberry Mead was fantastic, so I wanted to do another batch. I followed basically the same recipe as last year, with the following modifications:

  • I made a more complex tea. I started with a chaga decoction as I did last year, but when I removed the heat I then infused a sumac drupe (rather than the lemons) and 2 handfuls of strawberry leaves. I let the drupe and the leaves sit for an hour, removed them, and then let the tea cool down before straining to remove any last little bits. Strawberry leaf tea is one of my wife’s favorites, she harvests the leaves out of our yard. Plain strawberry tea definitely tastes like strawberries, so this should add another layer of flavor.
  • I added enough honey to get to an 18% alcohol potential. I wasn’t doing hydrometer readings much at this point last year.
  • Also, I remember last year was much hotter than this year, and the initial blast of fermentation built up pressure and this batch exploded all over! Quite a mess to clean up in the morning.
  • This year’s batch also survived a 2 hour car trip home after the workshop. If anything this will only help oxidize the must more, which in the early stage of fermentation is a good thing.

Now, 2 days afterward, it’s bubbling away nicely:

If it’s anything like last year’s, this will be incredibly refreshing later in the summer as we move into fall.

UPDATE: 15 August

I racked this mead tonight. It was already starting to clear, so I actually jumped it ahead of the Spruce Tip Mead, which is still quite cloudy (I expected this…. last year’s Spruce Mead is still cloudy). It tastes delightful! Not as sweet as last years, with 3% remaining alcohol potential. The ABV therefore is 15%. This is already quite good, and should get even better!

The color isn’t as vibrant as last year’s Strawberry Mead…. this could be because of the strawberries, or perhaps I didn’t use as many strawberries this year as I did last year.

Litha Harvest

Had a nice bottling session tonight for the last of the Gratitude Mead and the Cacao Mead 2.0:

Things seem to be moving again with mead production, now that the warmer weather is here. The Gratitude Mead was brewed last Thanksgiving, and the Cacao Mead at Yule, so it’s been half a year. Things will now begin to speed up. The Prickly Pear Mead is still very cloudy, it will need more time to clarify in the jugs.

Next on the task list: Rack the Coca Kola Mead, which will involve lots of tincturing/secondary fermentation with the coca leaves and kola nuts.

The Treequinox Mead is also about done fermenting, so that will go into the pipeline. We’re entering berry season, and all the berry meads were fantastic last year. So of course I want to do variations on them again this year. I definitely plan to experiment more with herbs in my meadmaking, expanding on the chaga base I worked with last year.

What’s so special about mead?

What’s so special about mead? This question has been on my mind a lot recently. It’s a valid question. I’ve been head-over-heels in love with mead for a while now, and such devotion tends to create blind spots in one’s understanding. I find it useful to periodically identify and examine some of these blind spots.

There are many things about mead that differentiate it from any other drink — alcoholic or not — that I’ve experienced. This article will talk about some of these differences.

Mead Is a Natural Beverage

First off, unlike any other sort of alcoholic drink, mead is a natural beverage, meaning it can happen without human intervention in nature. If rainwater fills an abandoned beehive and the mixture is charged with wild yeast in the air, fermentation will occur producing ethanol (the edible form of alcohol) and mead will be the result. This is not true for beer, which requires mashing, malting, and sparging grains (usually barley) to extract their sugars for fermentation, or for spirits, which require a complex distillation process that we’ve only been doing for a few hundred years. Wine is a bit closer to being a natural beverage, but the grapes must be crushed and liquefied somehow for fermentation to happen.

Furthermore, as far back as we can see into history, we find mead in all parts of the planet. Mead is perhaps most associated with northern European cultures, but it is also part of culture in Africa, the Americas, Asia, and among the aboriginal Australians.

Inspiration and Poetry

Mead is old enough to be encoded in the mythologies of most of the cultures it exists within. For instance, in Norse mythology, it is called the “mead of inspiration” and is renowned for its ability to loosen the poet’s tongue, resulting in the ability of the poet to see connections that would otherwise remain hidden. Absent are the archetypes of ethanol consumption prevalent in our culture: the frat party where pledges take turns vomiting in the bushes, the exuberant but not-so-coherent heckler at a sporting event, or the wino slumped against a loading dock, swilling his addiction from inside a brown paper bag, his life destroyed.

Mead is alcohol. You can get drunk from it, and it is most definitely intoxicating when consumed in quantity. But the effects of mead seem different to me, both in my personal experience and in my observations of people indulging in it. We all know the stereotype associated with ethanol consumption in our culture: someone drinks too much. their speech is slurred, and some of their most intense personality traits are further intensified. Some may become violent.

Yet mead somehow seems to raise the vibration of the gathering, lifting the spirits of those sharing it. Ancient texts refer to mead as “bringing wisdom” or allowing people to begin to “thrive,” bringing inspiration and facility with poetry (see, for instance, The Poetic Edda from Norse culture).

I was speaking with Eli Cayer from Urban Farm Fermentory about this phenomenon last week on our way to the MeadFest 2011. He told me a story of his first experience with mead, where it raised the vibration of the party, everyone had a good time, and there was no trouble. This theme is all-too-familiar with mead gatherings I have attended.

What is it about mead that is related to the energy of the people drinking it? I think there are several reasons for this profound relationship between mead and consciousness. The most obvious is honey. Honey is a profound food, probably the most magical naturally-occurring sweetener on Earth. At the risk of quasi-new-age mumbo jumbo, honey seems to be at a higher vibration than other available sugars. I notice a huge difference between mead and beers, for instance; much of this difference I attribute to the superiority of honey over extracting sugars from grains, a practice that is rooted in monocrop agriculture and therefore a relatively recent (and problematic) addition to the human experience.

Mead is a very wide spectrum of different drinks

Compared to (for instance) beer, mead has an extremely wide range of types and flavors. While beers such as a light wheat ale or a deep brown stout will not taste the same, they are at least in the same ballpark, they are both beer, with the malty flavor of barley and the bitterness of hops to some degree. Yet, even a plain, traditional mead made from only honey, water, and yeast can vary considerably in alcohol content (0-20% or so) and on the sweet/dry spectrum. But mead really starts to get interesting when one considers the huge spectrum of additives that can be used to flavor the mead. Adding favorite fruits or berries produces a melomel (fruit mead); adding spices produces a metheglin (spiced mead); mead made with apple cider rather than water is called cyser; mead made with grape juice is called pyment; then there are the nontraditional meads and herbalism, both of which can produce a unique beverage. All of these means will be profoundly influenced by the qualities of the ingredients used.

For instance, honey is the lifeblood of an ecosystem. Its characteristics will reflect the flowers and plants whose nectar is collected by the bees that made the honey. My favorite honey produced by my local apiary is raspberry honey, where the bees take nectar from raspberry plants within range of the hives. This honey is delicious, with the unmistakable tang of raspberries tucked inside the sweetness of the honey.

Even the qualities of the water used in the honey will affect the final product. For me, my brews always begin with some of the best water available on Earth — spring water that I harvest myself from a mountaintop spring in glass containers. Even if you don’t go to such extremes, using the best water available will contribute to the mead being the best it can be.

If mead is so special, why did it fall out of favor 500 years ago?

This is a very interesting question, I found out. It’s hard to give a simple answer. In the thinking and researching I’ve done, I’ve discovered it’s important to take that period of history into context. This was a time of tremendous change in Europe. Every aspect of culture was in transition:

  • This was the time of the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and the Scientific Revolution;
  • The New World was under frantic colonialism and exploration;
  • Capitalism was taking root economically, transitioning away from feudalism;
  • Smoke from the witch hunts was ubiquitous (which are one of the first globalized examples of mass genocide: most of Europe was at war with one another, but virtually all these countries were in agreement that burning witches was an appropriate strategy). This practice severely reduced the number of wise-women healers and shamans, who traditionally were responsible for the health of the tribe;
  • Land enclosure and large-scale monocrop agriculture were widely practiced for the first time.

A good example of how these shifts manifested in Europe the is the Reinheitsgebot (or Purity Act), passed in 1516 in Germany:

in all cities, markets and in the country, the only ingredients used for the brewing of beer must be Barley, Hops and Water. Whosoever knowingly disregards or transgresses upon this ordinance, shall be punished by the Court authorities’ confiscating such barrels of beer, without fail.

This law had profound effects on humanity’s relationship with ethanol. Prior to this law, throughout Europe there were Gruit Guilds, that is, herbal supply guilds, whose recipes and herbal mixtures had been perfected over centuries and handed down countless generations. It used to be, one went to the “pub” to get an ale for what ails you; there would be a variety of brews available, depending on the herbal effects desired.

The Purity Act wiped these guilds out, by specifying that the only acceptable herb to brew with was hops. What do we know about hops? As an herb it is highly estrogenic, which contributes to the stereotype of men who consume too much beer, with their increasingly goddess-shaped figures. Hops are a sedative, and they reduce the sex drive. By mandating that all legal brews must contain hops, the Ingolstadt magistrates ensured a more docile (and less healthy) populace, and by mandating confiscation of traditional herbal brews, they ensured that the healthiest drinks would be available (legally) only to them.

Another reason contributing to mead’s fall-from-grace is the relative scarcity of honey, especially compared to the unprecedented yield of monocropped grains taking root in the economic culture at the birth of capitalism, along with the fundamental feature of capitalism called “enclosure.” Land Enclosure allowed parcels of land to be enclosed from the common, razed to the soil, and only one plant allowed to grow. The patchwork quilt-like appearance of the English countryside, for instance, is a visual testament to centuries of land enclosure.

Finally, this period saw mass distillation of alcohol available to people for the first time in history. There is a “ceiling” to the amount of alcohol that fermentation alone can produce — when the alcohol content of a fermenting beverage reaches 15 or 20%, it creates a toxic environment in which the alcohol-producing yeast can no longer survive. Apart from being a fascinating metaphor (can you think of another organism that gradually toxifies its ecosystem until it can no longer sustain life?), it meant that the strongest alcoholic drinks were no more than about 20% alcohol at the most.

By the 1500s and 1600s, the alchemists’ secret of distillation was commodified and unleashed onto the public. By evaporating and then re-condensing the alcohol, spirits were created which could be up to about 95% alcohol — common spirits we know today such as whiskey, rum, vodka, tequila, and all the others. It is also interesting to note that the phenomenon of widespread alcoholism was relatively unknown until this period in history.

All of these factors contributed to mead losing popularity, remaining a rustic novelty drink with a few diehard enthusiasts keeping the tradition alive in a culture besotted with beers, wines, and spirits. Here were are now in the 21st century, with corporate-produced beers dominating the ethanol consumption across the globe.

Mead is making a comeback

As I write this in 2011, mead is making a comeback and is increasing dramatically in popularity. Micromeaderies are opening in every town, mirroring the Microbrew phenomenon of 20 years ago, when brewpubs seemed to pop up on every corner of the urban landscape.

But the real story is with homebrewers. More and more people are making mead, experimenting and discovering an entirely new way to be in relationship with one’s ecosystem. The qualities of ingredients and techniques used are both phenomena of place. Each bottle of mead will have its story, of how it came into being in that place.

Every bottle has its story

I love all of my brews, but the ones whose ingredients I wild-harvest myself often have the most meaning to me. Sometimes, I will do a spring run, a honey run, and forage on the same trip, harvesting my ingredients at the same time, with intent.

For instance, I can point to the spruce trees from which I took the leaves in my Spruce Tip Mead. Medicinally, I have been bonding with the Elecampane Mead for a while, getting to know this plant and feeling its effects on my body. The run of berry meads I did last summer were a testament to the ripening season, as each berry was done when it was ripe.

When you make — and consume — your own mead, with intent and a certain amount of reverence, you can resonate with its story. And if you age a few of the bottles, you’ll be able to share these stories far into the future.

Forbidden America podcast live interview

I’m happy to be a guest on the Forbidden America podcast interview, which airs live TONIGHT, Saturday June 4th, at 11pm. This is a live call in show, so please call in with your mead questions! You can call (661)449-9322 and ask your questions.

Tune in to listen live, or listen after-the-fact, by pointing your browser to blogtalkradio.com/forbiddenamerica.

UPDATE: the show is archived here:

Listen to internet radio with Steve McManus on Blog Talk Radio

Dandelion Sumac Mead

photo by Morgan Lindenschmidt

I enjoyed working with the Dandelion Mead last year. I was inspired by the traditional Dandelion Wine, and sure enough, my Dandelion Mead had a unique, if mellow flavor. Last year, I got the Dandelions from a friend, who harvested them for me from his yard.

This year, I wanted to go next-level by harvesting the dandelions myself. I got most of the flowers in my yard today, but only had a tiny fraction of what I needed. As I was going around my neighborhood looking for dandelions, I saw that most of the dandelions had gone to the seedhead stage (white puffballs), whereas I was looking for the yellow flowers. When the sunlight hit the air just right, you could see the airborne seeds, like dust particles in a ray of light coming through the window.

Finally, I saw a small south-facing hillside that still had some dandelions in yellow bloom. I pulled over and harvested a gallon of them:

photo by Morgan Lindenschmidt

Then, I tossed two sumac drupes from last year’s harvest into the container of dandelions, and put 2 gallons of water to boil. Once it was boiling, I dumped in the dandelion tops and the sumac drupes, let it boil for a few minutes longer, then turned off the heat to allow the infusion to cool overnight.

The next day, I strained the tea, and it smelled amazing! We tasted it and it was fantastic. My wife said, “I could drink this as my morning tea every day. Very nice!”

Also, when I got a gallon of honey I’d been storing, I was thrilled to discover it was raspberry honey! This is by far the best honey my supplier has available, and it’s probably the best honey I’ve ever had. The honey itself has almost a tartness to it that is utterly delicious. He calls it raspberry honey because the bees that produce it are near raspberry patches, and the flavor from the raspberries comes through. This is one of my favorite examples of how the qualities of the honey produced are a direct result of the ecosystem where the honey was produced. Honey truly is the lifeblood of an ecosystem.

I added enough of the honey to get up to about 19% alcohol potential:

I pitched the yeast, added everything to the carboy, mixed it, and airlocked it, and am left with a beautiful carboy of what will be a wonderful mead:

Truly a springtime brew! We’ll be enjoying this later in the summer.

UPDATE: 15 August

Just racked this mead… it’s already starting to clear! It measures in at 3% alcohol potential, which means this is a semisweet mead at 16% ABV. This will age beautifully, and is already bold and crisp.

Spruce Tip Mead

Out of all the meads I did last year, the Spruce Mead was easily the most unusual, and also one of the best-loved. I was told “it tastes like Yule” more than once, and one friend sipped it, shouted with joy, jumped up, gave me a hug, and told me it was the best mead he’d ever had. For me, it was also the first mead I made using ingredients from my local ecosystem. I harvested the spruce boughs on Beltane, and made the tea with that.

This year, I waited a bit longer in the season. I got the most gorgeous, neon-green tips when they came out:

photo by Morgan Lindenschmidt

I took about a half-gallon of these boughs, harvested sparingly from the north side of the tree, and from branches near my driveway that I didn’t want to grow much further over the driveway, and made a tea:

photo by Morgan Lindenschmidt

I brought the tea to a boil, and then turned the heat off for a nice spruce tip infusion. I then strained the spruce tips. I wanted to add some tang to it as well, so I made about 3 cups of sumac tea, using 2 TBSP of crushed staghorn sumac:

Again, I brought it to a boil, and let it infuse for about 5 minutes. I then poured the tea through a strainer into the large pot with the spruce tea, which warmed the tea up nicely (it had cooled to room temperature).

I then added enough honey to get to a 19% alcohol potential:

The spruce mead last year was extremely sweet, which was part of its charm. Hopefully this batch will be somewhat less sweet, with a relatively high alcohol by volume rating (I’m shooting for 15% alcohol, with 4% potential remaining for a pretty sweet finish).

Technically, this mead is a metheglin, since it was brewed with herbs. This was a big hit last year, and along with the Treequinox Mead this year I hope it comes out well.

UPDATE

9 Sept 2011: Just racked this mead. It’s still extremely sweet at 6% alcohol potential, which means this mead is at 13%. Flavor is subtly different than last year’s, which I attribute to using sumac rather than lemons and black tea. Still fantastic! Will be nice to have both this and the Treequinox Mead aging in my “cellar”….

Mead Workshop in Manchester, NH

making mead!

I’m happy to announce that I’ll be offering a Lore And Craft Of Mead Workshop in Manchester, NH on Thursday, June 30th at 7pm. The workshop will include a small mead tasting of a few brews I’ve done, a talk about the lore and value of mead, and a demonstration of how to make your first batch of mead. Registration for the class is $30, and includes a copy of The Lore And Craft Of Mead eBook.

Register for the class here: [wp_eStore:product_id:2:end]

In addition, I will have brewing kits available, that include all the equipment and basic ingredients you will need to produce your first batch of mead, including a 3-gallon glass carboy, rubber stopper, airlock, funnel, siphon hose, and a hydrometer, as well as a gallon of fantastic local (to me in Maine) honey and a packet of yeast.
NOTE: As of June 25 it is too late to get the brewing kits in time for the workshop.
Class registration is still available.

If there are any questions, or specific requests for what the class should cover, please contact us! I’m very much looking forward to sharing the magic of mead with Manchester people! Space is limited, so register now!

MeadFest 2011, and podcast interview

Last week Eli and I drove to Boston for MeadFest 2011. There were 4 Meaderies there sampling their wares. It was great to meet some fellow mead enthusiasts, and to finally sample some worthy commercial meads! I must admit, I haven’t had a large number of commercial meads, and very few of those I have tried compare to the homebrews I am used to from myself and my tribe. It was nice to know that there are good commercial meads in the world!

On the trip down, Eli and I recorded a podcast episode, talking about mead (of course), as well as the UFF’s mission more broadly. When I’m not involved with mead, my family and I have been doing a weekly podcast for the past 2 years or so, chronically our family’s journey toward conscientious living through nutrition and sustainability. We began the podcast as raw vegans, and have evolved our thinking/practices since then to a more primal, locavore-oriented philosophy. We’ve been anxious to get Eli onto the show since I first encountered UFF last year.

So if you want to hear more about mead, or the UFF and its mission, point your browser to our podcast page and listen to Episode 97 (the most recent one as of this writing). Mead enthusiasts might also be interested in Episode 86 (interview with my meadmaking mentor, Harper Meader), as well as Episode 49, where I talked about mead (basically an intro to mead from my point of view). There are many other topics on the podcast that might interest UFFies as well; take a peek at the contents page and see what sounds good to you.

Meadfest 2011

Very excited to be attending Meadfest 2011 in Boston this Thursday. I’ll be going with Eli from UFF, and there will be several meadmakers in attendance, including the guys from B.Nektar Meadery in Michigan, Moonlight Meadery in New Hampshire, Green River Ambrosia from western Massaschussetts, and several others.

As I’ve written here in the past, I don’t have a ton of experience with commercial meads, so I’m looking forward to meeting these guys, sampling some quality commercial meads, and networking. Should be a good time! This event IS open to the public, so come on down if you are in the area and want to dive in to the full-on mead experience.

Bardic Brews Mead: Coming Soon to a Market Near You

I’m so excited to finally be able to share this with everyone. I’m bringing Bardic Brews Mead to the marketplace! We’re going to put the first batch (Cacao Mead, of course….) in soon, so the first bottles will be available later this summer (whenever they are ready).

I’m teaming up with Urban Farm Fermentory in order to make this happen. Starting an alcohol-producing business requires significant upfront investment, including legal fees to navigate the complex government documentation and licensure (alcohol is a heavily regulated substance), as well as in proper equipment to produce alcohol on a commercial scale.

UFF has already done all this. They are a fully licensed facility, with all the gear necessary for commercial fermentation. They’ve been doing quite a few ciders this past year, which have all been outstanding. Also, UFF was the site of the Lore And Craft Of Mead Workshop I did with Daniel Vitalis last year. We’ll be doing contract brews together, which avoids all these upfront expenses for me.

Here’s how it works: the mead will be made on the UFF’s premises, using their space and equipment, but using my recipes, ingredient specifications, and techniques. Eli has been making mead for several years now, so I’m sure I’ll learn a lot by taking my mead to the commercial scale with him. Each batch will be many times greater than what I’m used to in my small 3 gallon homebrews. I expect my brews to get even better in this enviroment, with regulated temperatures, state of the art gear (I wonder what aging my mead for 6 months in an oak barrel would do? Let’s find out!), and constant supervision. This is the thing I love about working with UFF: our missions and values are completely compatible and intertwined. We are committed to doing things the right way.

My commercial brews will hold to the same standard as my homebrews: we will use real wild-harvested spring water, the best honey available in Maine, and high quality, local, and wild ingredients. I’ll make teas where appropriate to start each batch, and will also use tincturing as the mead ages. The only difference will be the size of the carboys. :-D

For the first batch, Cacao is a natural choice, given that I’ve had a few successful brews with it, and that my wife is a chocolatier. I’ll definitely be picking her brain a bit on this. It will still use wild-harvested chaga tea as a base, along with the best quality raw cacao available. The quality of these ingredients is off the charts! And the price point will be very reasonable as well.

Sales, at first, will be local to Maine. Alcohol interstate commerce is quite complex; you need permits and licenses within each state you want to ship to, and some states are impossible to ship alcohol to under any circumstances. Bardic Brews Mead will always be available at the UFF itself in Portland, Maine, as well as other shops, bars, and restaurants in Maine.

We might consider doing a preorder for the first 100 bottles (possibly numbering them). Watch this space for more info on where to buy Bardic Brews Cacao Mead.

Lastly, this website will not change. We are still committed to education, and building awareness on meadmaking, homebrewing, and the best ingredients you can use. Indeed, this site continuing as it has been is essential to our strategy moving forward. If anything, we’ll be ramping this end of the equation up as the site continues to grow. We’ll still encourage people to make their own mead using ingredients in their area. But now, our mead will also be available commercially as well, giving consumers an opportunity to sample mead made our way without having to do it yourself.

But first, we have to make some mead. I’ll provide updates on this site in real time as we go through the process. And for now, I’ll pour myself some Prickly Pear Mead and start to settle down for the evening.