Hi everyone, I need your help! ;D I made my first mead this last monday, on 13/8/12. My problem (or at least I think it's a problem) is that it's not making any foam AT ALL.
I give you the recipe I used, it's a pretty basic one and I found it on the web:
INGREDIENTS
* 1 LITRE (0.25 GAL) WATER
* 500 GRAMS (1.1 OUNCES) HONEY
* 2 TEASPOONS OF LIVE, COMPRESSED BREAD YEAST
PREPARATION
1) I live in Argentina, and everyone here cuts off their products with any piece of cheap junk they can to minimze costs. I can't buy any clear and liquid honey that is PURE, because most surely I'll get 1/5 of honey and the rest is just corn syrup.
So I bought the solid one and I melted it. Then I boiled 1 litre of water, added the (now) liquid honey and boiled it for 5 more minutes, stirring slow and constantly, and removing the foam that came to the top of the pot.
2) When it cooled down to room temperature (around 18 Cº/64 Fº, it's still winter here), I added the bread yeast diluted in a pinch of warm water. I stirred it well, and put the mixture into a plastic 5 litres (1.3 gal) water carboy that I previously sterilized.
I made an airlock with a 1/2 inch plastic tube going out of the carboy, into a bottle half filled with water. I found it the best, simplest and safest airlock method. I sealed the cap of the carboy holding the tube, so nothing gets in or out. I also sealed the cap of the water bottle too.
I might also say that EVERYTHING I used to make my mead was meticulously sterilized.
According to the recipe (and a lot of videos I've seen on the web showing the process) that was it, and I should wait 24-72 hours for the fermentation to begin, in which case there "should" be some foam on top of the mixture. But again, that's my problem: THERE IS NONE!
There is a fine layer of "something" growing thicker and wider VERY slowly on top of the must, there's A LOT of sediments, it foams like alka seltzer when shaken (looks more like an efervescence foam than a beer foam) and there's plenty of airlock activity, but NO FOAM.
I don't want to open the carboy to check the smell and taste yet, because I'm afraid that the opening could contaminate the mead if everything else was ok.
Please excuse me for taking your time and wisdom, and thanks in advance.
eddie
I give you the recipe I used, it's a pretty basic one and I found it on the web:
INGREDIENTS
* 1 LITRE (0.25 GAL) WATER
* 500 GRAMS (1.1 OUNCES) HONEY
* 2 TEASPOONS OF LIVE, COMPRESSED BREAD YEAST
PREPARATION
1) I live in Argentina, and everyone here cuts off their products with any piece of cheap junk they can to minimze costs. I can't buy any clear and liquid honey that is PURE, because most surely I'll get 1/5 of honey and the rest is just corn syrup.
So I bought the solid one and I melted it. Then I boiled 1 litre of water, added the (now) liquid honey and boiled it for 5 more minutes, stirring slow and constantly, and removing the foam that came to the top of the pot.
2) When it cooled down to room temperature (around 18 Cº/64 Fº, it's still winter here), I added the bread yeast diluted in a pinch of warm water. I stirred it well, and put the mixture into a plastic 5 litres (1.3 gal) water carboy that I previously sterilized.
I made an airlock with a 1/2 inch plastic tube going out of the carboy, into a bottle half filled with water. I found it the best, simplest and safest airlock method. I sealed the cap of the carboy holding the tube, so nothing gets in or out. I also sealed the cap of the water bottle too.
I might also say that EVERYTHING I used to make my mead was meticulously sterilized.
According to the recipe (and a lot of videos I've seen on the web showing the process) that was it, and I should wait 24-72 hours for the fermentation to begin, in which case there "should" be some foam on top of the mixture. But again, that's my problem: THERE IS NONE!
There is a fine layer of "something" growing thicker and wider VERY slowly on top of the must, there's A LOT of sediments, it foams like alka seltzer when shaken (looks more like an efervescence foam than a beer foam) and there's plenty of airlock activity, but NO FOAM.
I don't want to open the carboy to check the smell and taste yet, because I'm afraid that the opening could contaminate the mead if everything else was ok.
Please excuse me for taking your time and wisdom, and thanks in advance.
eddie