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I have 50 pounds of dark, strong honey. Any ideas would be very much appreciated. I've got extra sweet potatoes in my garden if I could use them it would be nice.
Or, if I chopped up some vanilla beans could that help with the flavor?
What do you mean"dark strong honey"? What does it taste like. smell like, the sweetness....
It will vary between what u think dark tasting honey is or dark smelling honey..
Yes, but not as nice as buckwheat. I saw a recipe for a gallon orange juice, and very high sugar content dark honey. I was thinking about what I'd read in old posts here about making it really dry, then adding something nice for flavor.
A dark strong honey and sweet potatoes? Sounds like a match made in heaven!
Does it have that barnyard (or cat piss, as my son calls it) smell of eastern buckwheat? Or is it more like heather, which is dark and strong, but lacks that smell?
Molasses-like? Definitely goes with the sweet potatoes.
No, it's more like heather. So would I cook up some sweet potatoes, then put a couple pounds of them mashed or cut up into the must? Would they give off so much sugar after fermenting that it would make the yeast stop due to alcohol? Or is there perhaps a recipe or formula?
Well, I used sweet potatoes in a batch of pumpkin mead and I did bake them, peel them, dice them and put 'em in a bag which I tossed in the honeywater. Still made a mess and lost a lot when racking.
I think instead I'll--and this fall will likely try it again--bake them, peel them, smoosh them, boil the bejezus out of them until the fermentables are in solution and the fiber is not (adding pectinase), strain it through a few layers of cheesecloth, THEN put it in the fermenter.
Oh, and a couple of pounds? For a gallon of mead, perhaps. I used I think 13-15 lbs of pumpkin/sweet potatoes in a 5 gallon batch (ended up with only 3 gallons, though).
The potatoes are mostly starch and won't add that much sugar unless you add some enzymes to break down starch.
I've not made mead with Avocado honey, but with dark strong honey you can get some odd medicinal flavors in some cases. You might want to make a test batch with 1 gallon as a traditional mead just to see what it smells and tastes like when you remove the sugar. If you like the result, then making a batch with sweet potato may be excellent.
Strong dark honeys usually do well for layering flavors. A pound or two of dark honey in a 3 gallon batch of wildflower/citrus/clover honey adds depth. They also stand up well to other strong flavors like berry or chocolate.
Is your palate trained? Can you identify specific notes in your honey? That will help in creating an appropriate flavor profile for a melomel or methiglyn. (sp?).
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