how long do you usually age this mead, if you can? i understand some mead's need to age to mellow, so how long for this on average.
thanks
dean
thanks
dean
Marc "hits the nail, on the head" here.If you have followed the recipe to the letter, JAO should be drinkable when it is finished. (Totally clear, no activity.)
But I read it is fantastic after 6 months of aging.
The problem is: Almost nobody can confirm this because most batches seem to mysteriously disappear somehow
Tis a mystery it is...... :icon_thumright:
Good luck with your batch!
After how long does it "peak", and will it start to deteriorate after that time?
Ha ha! Excellent. Metal and mead (Bruce D used to live next door to my partner Clares boss).I've got one 375 ml bottle of the first JAO I ever did (~2005?), but I've also tasted several that I've had kicking around. The spices do recede but I don't find that to be a fault if it's been aged a couple of years. To support this, I am at this moment pouring out a little sip of Ancient Lemon Mead (variant with lemon in place of orange, includes cinnamon, clove, allspice) and was started September 2009, bottled October 2010, and this was the half-full bottle with at least an inch of lees...
Boy is that ever niceThe honey is at the forefront, I'm suspecting it's clover rather than goldenrod although I don't have the most refined palate so I'd have to check my notes on that. I can definitely tell there's spices in there, I can pick out the cinnamon and clove if I swirl it over my tongue, but they're very subtle, not at all sharp like they sometimes are in a 2-month JAO. I'm not entirely sure I'd pick out "lemon" if I hadn't read the label. Pairs quite nicely with the Iron Maiden CD I'm currently listening to ;D and I highly recommend it as a Sunday Breakfast Appertif in the future.
Ha ha! Excellent. Metal and mead (Bruce D used to live next door to my partner Clares boss).
Strange though, of the variants I've made with just changing the citrus element, many didn't work well but the lemon was excellent....