My dad said I was half Scotch, the rest was water. Mac
My dad said I was half Scotch, the rest was water. Mac
I guess it is a cross between tallow and clover.
I guess it is a cross between tallow & clover as both are abundant in our area.
Part Irish, part Native, Part of a long line of alcoholics.
1. If it's in your kit and you don't know how to use it....It's useless.
2. If you can't reach your kit when you need it....Its useless.
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The 1/2 Swedish is on Mom's side. Dad's is Scotch-Irish and 100% Eastern KY Redneck. We drink the clear white stuff. We put honey on biscuits.![]()
Ummmmmm, honey on biscuits, aaaaaaaaaaaa,
1. If it's in your kit and you don't know how to use it....It's useless.
2. If you can't reach your kit when you need it....Its useless.
Alaska Backcountry Adventure Tours
www.youralaskavacation.com
Tell them Kevin sent you!!
honey doesn't spoil. in fact, honey is the one food edible by man that will never spoil. spoiling means "rendered inedible by bacteria", or thereabouts. honey is a natural antibacterial substance (they used it to dress wounds in ancient egypt and rediscovered it only recently), so it can't spoil.
we've been making mead at home for years, but we leave out the hops. just honey, water, and yeast, and allow to ferment. it's drinkable at about 3 months, although it's pretty sharp. the longer you let it rest (we've had enough willpower to wait two full years), the smoother and sweeter it seems to get.
watch out, though, the alcohol content can get pretty steep. it is definitely my favorite drink, though. good stuff!
so... what exactly does it taste like? just fermented honey?
What do you mean the honey was "fermented"? Pure honey can crystallize, I eat it every day and it tends to get thick and start forming crystals at about 3 months after being open. But then I pop it in the microwave for 45 seconds and the crystals melt.
You don't just set the honey out and wait for it to ferment. For all alcoholic beverages that rely on yeasts to ferment you go through a steeping process. For the yeast to begin fermenting it needs a sugar to act as a catalyst or a fuel. Most beers will use malt, which is a thick syrup much like the consistency of honey.
So then you boil the water, honey, (and hops if you so desire it) for about an hour. Then you cool to 70 degrees, add your yeast and mixture to the fermentation container and then let the yeast do its work.
god @#%!@#% $ i just spent 15 min on a writeup and lost it due to accidentally refreshing the page. let me try again:
in themselves, meads will tend to have a sort of spicy quality and a mild, somewhat dry sweetness. they will have no acidity unless there is a contamination [or the intentional addition] of a sour bacteria. they have no bitter character such as the tannins in wine, etc unless it is introduced by any added spices.
depending on the yeast culture used [and the source of water used] they will tend to have a mild to pronounced sulphur nost which i find pleasant in a mead if it is not overbearing.
spices are often [even usually] added to accent the natural flavor of the mead.
it should be noted that honey [and subsequently; mead] will spoil easily once diluted in water and the same sanitary proceedures must be ovserved in proccessing as with any other fermented beverage.
spontaenaeous fermentation could in fact be used, but it is not safe and has a high failure rate and therefore waste.
i have used everything from champagne and ale yeast cultures to my own culture derrived from fleischer's bread yeast.
that's all i got for the moment as i got tired of typing the first time around as it was.
cheers.
Last edited by canid; 05-14-2008 at 04:56 AM.
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law.
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it should also be noted that when you hard boil your diluted honey, you break down some sugars which are essential for getting a decent residual sugar level and therefore a sweet meat. this is usually achieved by priming, either after distilation and racking or at bottling, and is often done with pasteurized honey or another source of sugars. this can also be done to prime your mead for carbonation. i love carbonated, sweet and high final gravity meads.
Last edited by canid; 05-23-2008 at 05:25 AM.
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To see what's going on in my knife shop check out CanidArmory on Youtube or on Facebook.
My original question was about fermented honey. Because of the high water content the honey has fermented. I have a few cases of quart size jars of it and was asking if I can use it for anything.
Can you make mead with honey that is already fermented? Or anything else? I did find a few recipes using it such as fermented honey crackers and a honey lemon drink.
Can this already fermented honey be used for medicinal purposes?
Funny that I just found this post... Just the other night my fiancee and I were talking about making homemade wines and I brought up that I wanted to try and make mead some day... Thanks guys for the recipes, and info!
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If you already have a fermented honey water mix, as you just explained, then technically you have a mead. In the olden' days fermentation was much simpler. They did not understand that they needed yeasts for the fermentation process, but they did know that if you combined it with water and boiled it, then left it out for a time then it would ferment. What was happening was that wild yeast would eventually float to their open vats of mead stock and the fermentation process would begin.
It is of course more scientific now. I am curious as to how your honey was fermented in the first place? If I were you I would try a small quantity to see if it is palatable. Mixing the already fermented honey with something else won't really do anything for you. You always want the entire mix to ferment together. That is very important for both the alcohol content AND the flavor.
Really enjoy this receipe. Everyone that has tried my Mead has really enjoyed it and nothing but compliments.
4lbs of honey
1 packet of dry active yeast
1quart of water
Directions: Put honey and 1qt of water in pot, heat do not boil. Add yeast and stir well, pour into a 1 gallon jug and fill with more H2O. Place ballon on top of jug and place in a dark closet for about 30-45 days until balloon deflats. Strain and enjoy.
the trouble with spontanaeous fermentation, as i stated above, is that is is not safe from contamination by potentially pathogenic organisms, and is therefore not safe for consumptions, to the degree acceptable by most people who have the simple means to produce intentionally cultured fermented beverages. other fungi and bacteria will grow in that diluted honey as well as any yeast and some are toxic.
many mycotoxins are not reliably destroyed by pasteurization or even sterilization temperatures, so while the organism[s] may be killed off by heat treatment, the any toxins already produced may not, and it would therefore not nessecrily be safe to reuse no matter what the treatment. this is the same reason you can't just cook, or recook rancid meat.
Last edited by canid; 05-22-2008 at 02:10 AM.
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To see what's going on in my knife shop check out CanidArmory on Youtube or on Facebook.
jebus cripes sthrnstrong, that's a lot of honey for such a small batch.
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To see what's going on in my knife shop check out CanidArmory on Youtube or on Facebook.
Well, you are making a gallons worth of mead. The reciepe comes from a old man on the mountain (btw i live in Tennessee). I have made it before and it comes out fine. If you try it youll love it. Remember that receipe is for 1 gallon of mead.
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