Hello,
I've completely fermented my two new batches now, my second round, and everything went rather smoothly.
The following is specific to my case. The question is more general and is in bold at the bottom.
Here are the recipes. As you can see, they're literally the same except for the yeast strains, and I've made sure to treat them exactly the same. They've stood in the same room, been stirred for the same duration at the same time of day, gotten the same nutrients etc. up until III reached the 1/3 sugar break. They stopped fermenting about the same time.
Here's the complete diary. Within parentheses is the speed as in gravity points/24h, batch III listed first and batch IV listed second, so: "(III; IV)". On each day, batch III is listed first (on top), batch IV second. Within parantheses after the date is the day number.
"Last aeration" means that it's the last time I really aerated in the batch. Up to that point, I've aerated once or twice per day. When I "aerate", I do it for about 4-5 minutes. Subsequent "aerations" are just brief, 20-30 second agitation.
I transferred the batches by attaching a hose to the spigot and simply using a bottle filler to the carboy.
Now, the batches did taste ok, drinkable but far from excellent or delicious. Is this normal? Will they get much better with time? Or should mead taste great right after fermentation in order for it to be great later on. My first two batches (the ones before these ones) tasted a bit similar but much worse and made me cringe a bit as I drunk it. On the other hand, they weren't aged at all and I had committed various mistakes when I made them.
Thanks!
I've completely fermented my two new batches now, my second round, and everything went rather smoothly.
The following is specific to my case. The question is more general and is in bold at the bottom.
Here are the recipes. As you can see, they're literally the same except for the yeast strains, and I've made sure to treat them exactly the same. They've stood in the same room, been stirred for the same duration at the same time of day, gotten the same nutrients etc. up until III reached the 1/3 sugar break. They stopped fermenting about the same time.
Code:
III:
10 litres (2.6 gallons) water (1.002 in gravity)
6 kg (12 lbs) honey (below 20% water content)
1 tsp nutrient (Wyeast Nutrient Blend)
One package (5 g) Lalvin D47 (14% tolerance)
OG: 1.133
pH: 4,3-4,6
Volume: 14,1 liter
Sugar breaks:
Expected to go from 1.133 to 1.030. 1/3 would be 99, 2/3 would be at 64.
Expected FG: 1.030
IV:
10 litres (2.6 gallons) water (1.002 in gravity)
6 kg (12 lbs) honey (below 20% water content)
1 tsp nutrient (Wyeast Nutrient Blend)
One package Wyeast Dry Mead (even though a bit more than half the package would do) (18% tolerance)
OG: 1.130
pH: 4,3-4,6
Volume: 14,25 liter
Sugar breaks:
Expected to go from 1.130 to 1.000. 1/3 would be 87, 2/3 would be at 43.
Expected FG: 1.000
Here's the complete diary. Within parentheses is the speed as in gravity points/24h, batch III listed first and batch IV listed second, so: "(III; IV)". On each day, batch III is listed first (on top), batch IV second. Within parantheses after the date is the day number.
Code:
2012-12-01 (1) 20,9 C
133=0%
130=0%
-- (11,4; 5,1)
2012-12-02 (2) 20,9 C
124=1%
126=0,5%
-- (7,8; 7,8)
2012-12-04 (4) 19,5 C
108=3%
110=2,4% pH->3,1
-- (7; 8)
2012-12-05 (5) 18,7 c
101=3,9% Last aeration
102=3,4%
-- (7,8; 5,9)
2012-12-06 (6) 19,5 C
93=4,9% 1/3 sugar break
96=4,1%
-- (6; 7)
2012-12-07 (7) 20 C
87=5,6%
89=5% 2 tsp potassium carbonate
-- (6; 8)
2012-12-08 (8) 20,5 C
81=6,4%
81=6,0% 1/3 sugar break pH->3,6 Last aeration
-- (5,9; 7,8)
2012-12-09 (9) 20,5 C
75=7,2%
73=7,1%
-- (4,3; 6)
2012-12-10 (10) 20,5 C
70=7,8%
66=8%
-- (4,9; 4,9)
2012-12-11 (11) 20,5 C
66=8,4%
62=8,5%
-- (4,0; 4,9)
2012-12-12 (12) 21 C
62=8,9% 2/3 sugar break
57=9,2% 1 tsp nutrients
-- (3,1; 6,1)
2012-12-13 (13) 20,5 C
59=9,3% 1 tsp potassium carbonate
51=10%
-- (3,9; 4,9)
2012-12-14 (14) 20,5 C
55=9,8% pH->3,5
46=10,7%
-- (3,1; 6,2)
2012-12-15 (15) 20 C
52=10,2% 1 tsp nutrient
40=11,5% 2/3 sugar break
-- (2,1; 4,2)
2012-12-16 (16) 20,5 C
50=10,5% 1 tsp nutrient
36=12,1% Aeration
-- (3,6; 4,4)
2012-12-17 (17) 20,5 C
46=11,1% Aeration
31=12,8%
-- (3,3; 2,2)
2012-12-18 (18) 20,5 C
43=11,5% Aeration
29=13,1% Aeration
-- (2,9; 3,8)
2012-12-19 (19) 21 C
40=11,9%
25=13,6%
-- (3; 3)
2012-12-20 (20) 21 C
37=12,3% Aeration
22=14,1% Aeration
-- (3,1; 3,1)
2012-12-21 (21) 21 C
34=12,7%
19=14,5%
-- (2,5; 2,5)
2012-12-22 (22) 20,75 C
31,5=13,1%
16,5=14,8%
-- (1,8; 1,8)
2012-12-25 (25) 21 C
26=13,9%
11=15,6%
-- (1; 1,5)
2012-12-27 (27) 21-22 C
24=14,1%
8=16,1%
-- (1,4; 0,7)
2012-12-30 (30) 21 C
20=14,7%
6=16,4%
-- (0,9; 0)
2013-01-01 (32) 21,8 C
18=15%
6=16,4%
-- (1,1; x)
2013-01-03 (34) 20,3 C
16=15,3%
x=x
(I didn't do any more measurements but batch III is clearly about to stop. They're both in filled up carboys now, except for the bottom 1-2 litres which is probably mostly crap anyway.)
--
"Last aeration" means that it's the last time I really aerated in the batch. Up to that point, I've aerated once or twice per day. When I "aerate", I do it for about 4-5 minutes. Subsequent "aerations" are just brief, 20-30 second agitation.
I transferred the batches by attaching a hose to the spigot and simply using a bottle filler to the carboy.
Now, the batches did taste ok, drinkable but far from excellent or delicious. Is this normal? Will they get much better with time? Or should mead taste great right after fermentation in order for it to be great later on. My first two batches (the ones before these ones) tasted a bit similar but much worse and made me cringe a bit as I drunk it. On the other hand, they weren't aged at all and I had committed various mistakes when I made them.
Thanks!