Several of my first traditionals have this. They are still young (~6months) and I was assuming this is just what young meads tastes like and it will age out. Is this correct? Googling the issue of phenolic meads I seem to get mixed opinions on whether or not this is a permanent flaw. If it is, I'm a bit concerned, as I've used some of these for topping up subsequent batches and taste is noticable in these now (duh!).
As it covers several meads, I won't post logs/recipe unless someone thinks it would be useful, and I'm happy with general opinons on this...I don't think it's anything wildly wrong with my process (aeration, nutrients, pH, etc). I do suspect it might have something to do with Gervin White Wine yeast (GV5) I was using alot at the time, as I've not noticed it in younger meads made with other yeasts (KV1-1116, EC-1118, WY1338, etc).
Assuming it is a permanent flaw, is there a good way of masking or blending out the taste? Sweetening I've found does the trick at least to some extent, but not always totally.
As it covers several meads, I won't post logs/recipe unless someone thinks it would be useful, and I'm happy with general opinons on this...I don't think it's anything wildly wrong with my process (aeration, nutrients, pH, etc). I do suspect it might have something to do with Gervin White Wine yeast (GV5) I was using alot at the time, as I've not noticed it in younger meads made with other yeasts (KV1-1116, EC-1118, WY1338, etc).
Assuming it is a permanent flaw, is there a good way of masking or blending out the taste? Sweetening I've found does the trick at least to some extent, but not always totally.