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mead help not sure what to do next

12K views 20 replies 10 participants last post by  VolunteerK9 
#1 ·
Made a batch of Joes ancient mead back in Sept- has never really cleared, the some of the fruit sank but its pretty cloudy- did bubble away nicely at the beginning but then stopped. Probably it was kept a little too cool

Racked it today the reading on the hydrometer was 1.14 which is sweet?
and the percent potential alcohol is 14, have no idea what it was to start with so no idea what this means
it does smells really good

Question

Its back in a carboy- what to do now? leave it?
should we check with hydrometer again? when?
is it drinkable?
with all the fruit and sediment out the carboy is not very full- is that a problem

Thanks!
 
#3 ·
Well that all depends on the starting gravity. Unless you began the must as undiluted honey, this never started fermenting (or didn't get very far). 1.140 is more like a starting gravity, and more like 18.5% potential alcohol. Very possible that it was too cool and the yeast just never got their boots on. I'd warm it up and repitch if it doesn't start fermenting pretty readily.
 
#5 ·
Rehydrate another sachet of yeast and add it to the must. Oh, wait, just read your first sentence. Bread yeast won't cut it; it's bred for CO2 production as opposed to flavor and alcohol tolerance. We have our culprit :). Find your local homebrew shop and spurge the dollar on some wine yeast.
 
#6 ·
Joes ancient orange mead calls for bread yeast and I think classic jaom is sweet and not terribly alcoholic. I wonder if the hydrometer is being read properly or as you said it is too cool where you fermented it. Taste it and see if your horse has diabetes is the next step! If it hadn't worked some, I think it would be growing mold by now wouldn't it? Thaat all said, the moderator knows much much more than I!! Good luck. My first batch was started end of August and Is one heck of a parts washer solvent, but not very drinkable yet. You may need to give it more time.
 
#9 ·
I see. I'll delete my ignorant comment. Well, however you like it I guess. I've always liked to make Cab wine on the dry side and so when I made cyser, I just modified my recipe for apple wine and I really like it that way, pretty dry but with honey flavors. To be honest, I was always worried about leaving that residual sugar in there and seeing the corks pop if some stray organism started working it later.
 
#12 ·
going to ignore it for a while- bubbled a few times after racking so is still alive- taste is sweet and smells like alchol, will make next batch in summer when its warmer

maybe repitch it in a couple of weeks if not changing?

was the honey to high in sg? it was made from runny honey (was to runny by refractometer to sell!)
 
#13 ·
Too high for bread yeast? Possibly. Bubbles after racking are normal and not necessarily indicative of fermentation: the saturated CO2 dissolved into solution is dislodged by the racking activity, and offgasses. If you want to stick with the bread yeast, I'd be sure to rehydrate properly (in warm water not must, follow the packet directions).
 
#14 ·
THere are many issues with this whole thing but I bet your next mead will be better! Not that this one will be bad, but mistakes can teach us.

Can you publish the original recipe? Not everyone would be familiar with what you speak of otherwise. I am not familiar with ancients

I am not familiar with Fishmans yeast. There is better data on other known yeasts. One that I like for stuck fermentations is called Champagne. I also consider checking the temperature, adding nutrients, or getting a robust starter going before repitching. Heating pads help.

18 % PAV here also, though perhaps Canadian hydrometers use metric? Or maybe our 18% is there 14?
 
#16 ·
I made apricot mead one time. It took 6 months, but was well worth it. I used fleischmann's bread yeast, and it will go quite a ways alcohol wise before it dies. (sorry, I didn't own an sg meter then, and I don't brew anymore) I'm going with letting it continue to brew, maybe a pinch more yeast, just put it in the water heater cabinet and forget about it. And be sure the co2 can get out.
 
#20 ·
I would guess it will be a hot tasting brew that will need a couple years to tame with very alcohol tolerant yeast. JAOM is meant to be a quick finishing never fail mead. If you jack up the level of alcohol, you change itinto something else. If your SG is stopping the fermentation, I wouldn't jump all the way to champagne yeast. Mebbee 71B-1122, but you have still left the realm of JAOM. Turbo is designed for turning table sugar into alcohol for distilling, unless youy just want to get drunk, I wouldn't use it for good tasting mead.
 
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