How to make mead (2024)

Mead is made by fermenting honey with water, sometimes with fruits, spices, grains, hops etc. The words 'mead' and 'honey-wine' are often used interchangeably, but some cultures differentiate between the two. The defining characteristic of mead is that the main source of its fermentable sugar comes from honey.

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While mead is quite possibly the oldest alcoholic beverage, what makes it fascinating is the honey.

If you’re a true honey aficionado, you’ll know that honey tastes completely different depending on what the bees have been eating. Bees tucking into a tangy orange blossom, or the deep flavour of heather, produce honey with a different flavour. So that’s where we start from – with the best honey from around the world.

It’s this difference in flavour that makes meads taste so different.

Equipment for brewing

How to make mead (1)

Mead is a bit simpler to make than beer, so you need less equipment, too. Check out our guide on essential home-brewing equipment for more information.

More like this
  • Funnel
  • Demijohn to ferment in
  • Airlock and bung for demijohn
  • Short length of tubing
  • Big food safe bucket – make sure it can handle boiling water (c.10 litres)
  • Large metal spoon

Ingredients

Most of the specialist kit can be bought from homebrew shops (Wilko and Boots have a good basic home-brewing section).

  • 750g of honey of your choice (more flavoursome the better)
  • Sachet of brewer’s or wine yeast
  • Extra honey to back-sweeten
  • 25g of no rinse sanitiser powder e.g. SureSan (Sodium Percarbonate)
  • Acid regulator e.g. citric acid at 1g/ltr (so 5g for a 5l batch)
  • Yeast nutrients 2g/litre (so 10g for a 5l batch)
  • 2 Campden tablets

Basic mead recipe

Step 1: Sterilising

As with all fermentation, it’s important to have a clean, sterile environment so the yeast grows, but nothing else does.

So, before you start, wash down your work space with warm soapy water. It's also a good idea to wash all your equipment in warm soapy water if you haven’t used it in a while. Read more about how to clean brewing equipment to keep your kit in tip-top shape.

  1. In the bucket, mix the sanitisation powder as per the instructions on the packet with 5 litres of water to create a sanitising solution.
  2. Pour a portion of this solution into the demijohn and swirl around for a few moments to sanitize the fermenter. Empty this back into the bucket, making sure there’s none left in the fermenter.
  3. Sanitize the funnel, the bung, spoon, and airlock by placing them in the solution in the bucket.
  4. Remove the equipment from the bucket and place it on your clean work surface. The funnel can sit on top of the demijohn to keep it from touching dirty surfaces. Pour away the sanitisation solution in the sink.

Your bucket, demijohn and lid, and other equipment should now be sanitized and ready to brew with.

Step 2: Making the mead

These instructions produce a light session mead at around 4%, this means we’re going to start with 150g of honey per litre (so for 5 litres that’s 750g).

  1. Add 5 litres of boiled water to the sterilised and rinsed bucket.
  2. Add the yeast nutrient and acid regulator, and stir to dissolve using the spoon.
  3. Now, add the honey to the boiled water and stir again until all the honey has dissolved.
  4. Leave the liquid to cool for a while so it doesn't damage or crack your demijohn, then transfer using the funnel.
  5. Leave your liquid to cool down to room temperature before pitching the yeast.
  6. Rehydrate your yeast according to the packet, and leave for 5 mins. Add to your demijohn and shake gently to mix.
  7. Add the airlock to the demijohn, fill the airlock with water and leave in a cool dark place where it won’t be disturbed for 2-3 weeks.

How do I know if it's worked?

How to make mead (2)

You’ll know your yeast pitch was successful if after about 6 hrs, when gas starts to bubble out of your airlock. This is CO2, which is a natural by-product of fermentation, and the reason beer has bubbles in it.
As the fermentation progresses, you will notice a layer of sediment building up at the bottom of your fermenter. This is dead and dormant yeast, and is completely normal. It can be removed to increase clarity and taste.

How do I know when it’s ready?

After a few weeks, (depending on temperature) you should see the bubbling in the airlock slow down and begin to stop, once this has happened the yeast has converted all the sugar into alcohol, so your mead is almost ready.

Place your fermenter upright in your fridge for 24 - 48 hrs. The cold conditions will cause your yeast to go dormant and drop out of solution. The longer you leave it, the clearer it will become.

Racking and back-sweetening

Always remember to sanitise all the equipment that has any contact with your mead.

Next, using a piece of tube or hose and syphon the top clear layer of your mead into your sanitised bucket. Make sure you leave the sediments at the bottom of your fermenter. Little trick – get your hose about 2cm from your dormant yeast, and when syphoning, keep as still as possible and let gravity do the work.

What is back-sweetening?

As your ferment is complete, all of the honey in it should have been converted to alcohol. While this is great, it will also mean that your mead will currently be quite dry and you may want to add some more honey back in to sweeten it, (this is known as back-sweetening).

This extra addition of honey may cause your mead to begin fermenting again so to prevent this add 2 Campden tablets in the honey. Campden tablets are made of sodium metabisulphite, an additive that kills yeast and bacteria. Sulphites are commonly used in wine and cider production.

Simply dissolve your honey and tablets in a small volume of hot water, and pour as much as you like into your mead. You should now have a 4-5 litre semi-sweet non-carbonated mead at 4% ABV.
Clean and sterilise your demijohn and transfer your mead back into it.

Conditioning your mead

Leave the container at room temperature away from direct sunlight for 2-6 weeks to condition. Conditioning allows the flavours to meld. When it's ready, transfer to bottles for longer-term storage.

Want to try making more beverages at home? Read our expert guides...

How to make flavoured spirits
Elderflower wine recipe
Flavoured gin recipes
How to make kombucha
Home-brewing safety tips

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What's your favourite drink to make at home? Leave a comment below...

How to make mead (2024)

FAQs

What are the mistakes when making mead? ›

Too warm a fermentation, insufficient aging and conditioning, unhealthy fermentation, too high a starting gravity or too many fermentables added, over-attenuation, infection. Controls: Lower fermentation temperature. Let mead age longer before consuming.

What is the best ratio for mead? ›

The ratio of water to honey depends on the type of mead you want to make. For a dry mead, the ratio is 4 parts water to 1 part honey; a sweet mead is 2 to 1. Kluz likes his mead sweet, so he typically uses 1 3/4 gallons of honey and tops it off with 3 1/4 gallons of water.

How much fruit for 1 gallon of mead? ›

A good starting point with most fruits is about 3 pounds of fruit per gallon of mead, though I have been known to use 5 or even 6 pounds of fruit. Fruit blends can produce some great-tasting meads.

Can you add too much honey to mead? ›

If you put in a bunch of honey and you get enough yeast (the right kind of yeast where it ferments all the way out) then you'll have a really dry, high alcohol champagne-like mead. You can use less honey to make a lower alcohol mead. Using less honey might make it a little bit more dry, though not necessarily.

Why does no one drink mead anymore? ›

Mead's decline can be attributed to the rise of other alcoholic beverages, increased availability of sugar, and decreased honey production, facilitating the production of rum and brandy and changes in taxation laws.

How much honey do I need for 1 gallon of mead? ›

The average mead recipe calls for 3 to 3.5 pounds of honey per gallon of finished mead, depending on the sugar content of the honey. This makes strong mead in the range of 14 percent alcohol.

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.

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.

What happens if you don't degas mead? ›

Mead, unlike beer, benefits from degassing during fermentation. Honey, being largely composed of sugar, can ferment very rapidly in the first stages of fermentation and build up a significant amount of CO2 in the form of carbonic acid. This carbonic acid can slow fermentation.

How to make mead sweeter? ›

Yeast can only survive up to a certain ABV, if there's still unfermented sugar left when it reaches that point, it'll be sweet. Easiest way to sweeten mead is to ferment dry. Stabilize it and then back sweeten with honey to your liking.

When should I remove fruit from mead? ›

You also want to push the fruit down twice a day (called punching down the fruit cap) as you don't want the floating fruit to dry out or spoil. 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.

What fruit makes the best mead? ›

Top 10 Fruits for Crafting the Perfect Melomel (Fruit Mead)
  • Blueberries. Historically, a blueberry honey wine was called “bilbemel.” It's always been a popular combination because blueberries are easy to grow, earthy, and sweet. ...
  • Blackberries. ...
  • Strawberries. ...
  • Plum. ...
  • Acai. ...
  • Pink Guava. ...
  • Papaya. ...
  • Curuba.
Jun 11, 2021

What is the average alcohol content of homemade mead? ›

Meads range is between 3%–20% ABV, depending on the fermentation. The region of 3%–7% ABV is considered a 'session' mead, 7% to 14% is considered standard, and 14% to 20% are called 'sack' meads.

How to make mead stronger? ›

However, if your goal is to have a stronger flavor, or even to not have your mead taste as dry, using a technique known as backsweetening can help. This technique usually is done to add a certain amount of sugar, usually honey since it's a honey wine, to increase the color, gravity, and ultimately, flavor of the drink.

What can go wrong with mead? ›

Check sweetness levels and attenuation (an over-attenuated and drier mead than expected might seem acidic if less sweetness is present than what was planned). Alcoholic/Hot Ethanol and higher alcohols. Hot, spicy, vinous aromas and flavors, warming or burning mouthfeel and aftertaste, increased bitterness.

How do I know if my mead has botulism? ›

Well, if there is some kind of botulism infection in your mead or must, you'll know it pretty quickly because these particular bacteria produce a really nasty smell, and a dark discoloration under the surface of the infected media, in this case mead or must.

How do you make good quality mead? ›

The only way to make a stable sweet mead is by adding preservatives like sulfites or sorbates. These cut off fermentation and leave residual sweetness behind. The average mead recipe calls for 3 to 3.5 pounds of honey per gallon of finished mead, depending on the sugar content of the honey.

How can you tell if mead is good? ›

There are lots of odors and visual indicators as well. Infections can range from mold on the surface to nasty tendrils of spoilage and bacterial colonies extending down from the surface into the mead, etc. If it smells bad and looks bad, it's probably bad. This is of course after fermentation and clearing.

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