FERMENT · BOISSONS (ALCOOLISÉES)

Traditional mead

Mead

Miel fermenté en alcool — la plus ancienne boisson alcoolisée documentée

Durée de fermentation 2-4 weeks primary, 3-12 months aging (some traditions aging years)
Plage de température 16-22°C (60-72°F) for primary; cooler is fine and produces cleaner flavor
Sel / saumure N/A
Difficulté Modéré
Importance Fondamental
Avis de traduction

Le texte principal de cette page est disponible uniquement en anglais dans la v1. L'interface et les métadonnées sont traduites en français. La traduction éditoriale est prévue pour la v2.

Profil

Mead is the ferment of honey diluted with water — the oldest documented alcoholic beverage, with archaeological evidence in Chinese vessels dating to 7000 BCE predating both wine and beer. The basic preparation is essentially trivial: honey, water, yeast, time. The complexity lives in honey selection (different floral sources give materially different meads — orange-blossom mead is structurally a different beverage from buckwheat mead), starting gravity (sweet vs dry meads come from different honey-to-water ratios), and aging (mead improves dramatically over months and years in a way most home ferments do not).

The modern mead-making community distinguishes several traditional categories: traditional or show mead (just honey, water, yeast); melomel (mead with fruit added); metheglin (mead with herbs and spices); cyser (mead with apple juice); braggot (mead with malted grain — a beer-mead hybrid). The traditional version is the foundational form; the others build on it.

The yeast selection is the major technical decision. Traditional historical meads used wild yeasts from the honey itself or from the environment — slow, unpredictable, often complex but inconsistent. Modern home mead-making typically uses cultivated Saccharomyces cerevisiae wine yeasts (D-47, K1V-1116, EC-1118 are common starting points) which produce reliable results at known alcohol levels. Both approaches are legitimate; wild-fermented traditional meads represent a niche revival in the modern community.

The finished mead's alcohol level depends on starting gravity: 3 lb honey per gallon water (roughly 300 g/L) gives a dry mead at 12-14% ABV; 4 lb/gallon gives a semi-sweet at 14% with residual sweetness; 5 lb/gallon gives a sweet dessert mead. The yeast strain's tolerance caps the alcohol; once the yeast can't survive the alcohol environment it stops working and any remaining sugar becomes residual sweetness.

Techniques clés

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Erreurs courantes

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Références croisées

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