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The Compleat Meadmaker : Home Production of Honey Wine From Your First Batch to Award-winning Fruit and Herb Variations

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Format: Paperback


Description

Since The Compleat Meadmaker was first published, mead has continued to grow in popularity as crafted beverages have become an established part of the beverage market in America. In 2003 there were roughly 60 commercial meaderies in the US, but by 2020 this number stood at 450. Naturally, many hobbyists are also discovering the delights of making this “nectar of the gods” themselves. Thanks to the global distribution of bees and, therefore, honey, you will find mead-like drinks in virtually every corner of the world. No wonder historians recognize it as one of humankind’s oldest fermented beverages. Mead production never really ceased in Europe and Africa, but its star was eclipsed with the increasing production and distribution of wine, beer, and distilled spirits from the 1600s onward. With the rebirth of brewing and the establishment of world-class wine producing regions in the US, it is time for mead in the twenty-first century to be brought back into the limelight. Mead needs to establish a vocabulary of its own and find a place in the hearts of homebrewers and home winemakers.In The Compleat Meadmaker, veteran meadmaker Ken Schramm—one of the founders of the Mazer Cup Mead Competition, North America’s oldest mead-only competition—introduces the novice to the wonders of mead. With easy-to-follow procedures and simple recipes, he shows how you can quickly and painlessly make your own mead at home. In later chapters, Schramm introduces flavorful variations on the basic theme that lead to meads flavored with spice, fruits, grapes, and malt.The author covers the many aspects of meadmaking in a comprehensive but easy-to-read fashion, with something for novices and experienced brewers and vintners alike from basic equipment for meadmaking, creating your first must, and on through the basics of fermentation, racking, and bottling. Once the first steps have been taken Schramm goes into more detail, involving balancing for taste using acid, priming for sparkling mead, corking practices, and strategies for clarifying. He also covers aspects of fermentation, such as selecting the right yeast strain, aerating and managing the pH of your must during the critical early phase of fermentation, and adjusting nutrient levels to suit mead fermentation. The author also troubleshoots common problems and processes, such as stuck fermentations, fermentations that will not start, slow or prolonged fermentations, measuring total acidity via acid titrations, and on balancing residual sugars through sweetening, malo-lactic fermentation, increasing acidity, and drying out the mead further. The fine-tuning process does not stop after fermentation is finished. Perhaps the finest characteristic of mead is that it seems to improve with age almost indefinitely. As well as advice on how long to store it, Schramm also offers up his experience with the many different approaches to conditioning and maturing mead, focusing on the use of oak chips, blocks, and barrels to age mead on wood.As one of the oldest fermented drinks and using the oldest sweetener known to humankind, mead and honey are inextricable. Schramm delves into a brief natural history of honey production and the bees that make it possible, with fascinating insights into the profession of beekeepers. He explores sources of nectar and pollen and the benefits of honey varietals explored, with a section devoted entirely to varietal honey based on floral variety. Along the way Schramm delves into the concept of honey “vintage”, grades of honey, sugar, moisture, organic acids, mineral content, color terminology, and how you should not judge a honey’s flavor by its color. There is also a discussion of aroma compounds, absolutely essential if wishing to understand the organoleptic qualities of honey. While mead can be a charmingly simple drink to make, home meadmakers can easily indulge in a host of different flavors to make unique and delicious meads. The author provides you with an understanding of the role quality ingredients play in creating a really pleasing mead. There are several ingredients-focused chapters that look at making sack mead, melomel, cyser, pyment, hippocras, metheglin, and braggot. At the end, Schramm puts it all together in a section devoted entirely to recipes.As one of the most ancient of human beverages, mead arose in part because it was easy to make. Despite this, mead is a surprisingly complex, diverse, and romantic drink that can range from bone dry to profoundly sweet, and can be crafted to complement any type of food. With The Compleat Meadmaker, you can see just how simple, fun, and rewarding meadmaking is. Read more

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Brewers Publications (June 9, 2003)


Language ‏ : ‎ English


Paperback ‏ : ‎ 216 pages


ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9


ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 09


Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15.2 ounces


Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.1 x 0.65 x 10.09 inches


Best Sellers Rank: #42,052 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #8 in Beer (Books) #25 in Homebrewing, Distilling & Wine Making #31 in Wine (Books)


#8 in Beer (Books):


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Learn From A Master
I found this to be a thoughtful and well thought-out book which gives a wealth of information on mead making and each step in the process. Included are details on selecting and preparing yeast, beekeeping, fermentation vessels, and on and on. This is a book for someone that either wants to get a good grasp of the subject before doing a deep dive, or someone else who has dabbled in mead making for a couple of years, and would now like to understand what the heck they are doing (like me!). This is one of the few books I've found where sulfites are not used, and I find that to be a refreshing change. We don't need to ingest more chemicals, which are basically added to everything we eat. By using natural honey and organic ingredients (and good sanitation practices), we can actually make, by ourselves, delicious and wholesome beverages that would be difficult to purchase. The other book I've found that doesn't just pour on the sulfites at every opportunity is "Make Mead Like A Viking" by Jereme Zimmerman. Another reviewer complained about the "meandering" content of this book and the lack of recipes. I have many books on mead, and this is basically the only one where the author has years of experience backing up his theories and is understandable; this is more of an encyclopedia/collection of essays. As far as the recipes go, no, there are not that many in this book, but that's not why I bought it. I have other books (such as "Big Book of Mead Recipes" by Robert Ratliff) which has a small initial section on the background of mean, how to make mead, followed by the remainder of the book (with 60+ recipes). Also, you can find a ton of recipes all over the internet, but I have not found many (if any) sites with all the background this author provides. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2023 by default_character

  • Dated and disorganized, few recipes, but expansive
This book is truly complete in that it covers everything mead and honey related exhaustively—and that’s maybe the right word. The first ten plus percent of the book—more pages, by the way, than are devoted to recipes?—is a tiring argument delving deeply into which fermented beverage was first, historically. The book then meanders through bee keeping and theory, but mixed in, with no discernible indexing, is the important information like the tables on how much spice to add and when or what types of honey do what to a mead. The author is obviously an expert on the subject but the book is dated (“you can find these resources in your phone book”) and needs a new edition and a new edit to lay things out in a productive, cross referenced volume. After reading through the whole book I am super overwhelmed as to how I’m going to go back and find the specific pages to actually make the recipes—since the few (and I mean few, I think there are less than ten recipes) recipes are vague (“make the mead, ferment, then rack, and age”) and assume you’re already intimately familiar with the mead process from reading the other 90% of the book. I know this book isn’t marketed for beginners and is meant to be a reference volume but it’s a shame someone hasn’t gone back through and taking this huge wealth of information and distilled it into something people at all levels can use throughout their growth as meadmakers. Pictures, an update in the references, and some simple indexing and cross referencing would make this a usable book. For me I can’t imagine coming back to it without several years of practice. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2023 by Patrick

  • Detailed
Who know so much about Mead. Great instructions and recipes.
Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2023 by Roger

  • Tons of Experience put into a book
This book is a large snap shot of how to make honey wine (mead). (Mead was the original party drink of the Vikings and Anglo Saxons while beer was basically used like water with just barely enough alcohol in it to make the water safe to drink.) This book covers just about everything and the authors well-rounded education shines through in every well-spoken and educational chapter. This is the "Betty Crocker Cookbook" of mead making... No it doesn't have tons and tons of recipes but it does have a fair number of them and tons of ideas to create your own recipes. The book covers everything from how much honey and of what kind to use, spices, fruits, sanitation and a good history of mead and chapters on honey and a bit of general Chemistry. I have found the "No Heat" method of mead making (as explained in the book) to be simple and produce wonderful results. My own notes in addition to the book are as follows. Although the book walks you through the mead making process in great detail the one error is the book doesn't tell you how to make your mead taste like mead in the chapters that explain how to START making mead. The process as the book describes converts almost all the honey to alcohol but leave few sugars to even taste like mead. The actual answer to this problem can be found in the index under sweetening but that's in a different section. The short version is convert the honey to alcohol, get fermentation to finish and then add more honey or whatever juice to sweeten it and get the flavor to suit your taste... the books instructions are more complete than mine but keep in mind you will have to look up that section it is not in the section for beginners. Lastly there is an orange red airtight cover for glass carboys that has two holes, the central hole is obviously for a racking cane to drain liquid but there are no instructions for what the other hole is for... The other hole is to blow into in order to create air pressure that starts the racking process (siphoning). This doesnt seem to be covered anywere even though theres no way for a novice to know it... The book is great overall and well worth the price. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2011 by B Gutz

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