Equipment You’ll Need
- Fermentation vessel – usually a glass demijohn (1 gallon is standard for beginners) or a food-grade plastic fermenter.
- Airlock and bung – lets carbon dioxide escape while keeping oxygen and contaminants out.
- Sanitiser/steriliser – keeping everything sterile is essential to avoid bad flavours.
- Siphon tube – for transferring mead without disturbing sediment.
- Hydrometer (optional but useful) – measures sugar levels and potential alcohol content.
- Bottles & caps/corks – glass bottles (swing-top, beer bottles, or wine bottles).
- Large spoon or paddle – for mixing honey and water.
- Funnel – for pouring into narrow-necked demijohns.
Ingredients (for 1 gallon batch)
- 1.3–1.5 kg of raw honey (the better the honey, the better the mead)
- About 3.5 litres of water (non-chlorinated if possible)
- Wine yeast (Lalvin D47 or EC-1118 are popular)
- Yeast nutrient (helps fermentation, as honey alone lacks nutrients)
Optional: fruit, spices, herbs (e.g. berries, cinnamon, ginger) for flavoured meads.
Basic Mead-Making Recipe
- Sanitise everything
Clean and sterilise your demijohn, funnel, spoon, and airlock. This is the single most important step. - Mix must (honey + water)
- Warm your honey slightly (not boiling, just so it flows easily).
- Add it to your demijohn or fermenter with water.
- Stir or shake until dissolved.
- Top up with water to about 1 gallon.
- Add yeast & nutrient
- Sprinkle wine yeast onto the must.
- Add yeast nutrient according to the instructions.
- Fit the bung and airlock (half-filled with sanitised water).
- Primary fermentation (2–4 weeks)
- Store in a dark, cool place (around 18–22°C).
- The airlock will bubble as CO₂ escapes.
- When bubbling slows or stops, fermentation is nearing completion.
- Racking (optional but recommended)
- Siphon the mead off the sediment (lees) into a clean demijohn.
- Helps avoid off-flavours.
- Secondary fermentation / ageing (2–6 months)
- Leave the mead to clear and mature.
- Taste occasionally; it will improve with age.
- Bottling
- Once fermentation is finished and the mead is clear, siphon into sterilised bottles.
- Seal with caps or corks.
- Ageing in bottle
- Mead is often drinkable after 3–6 months but improves greatly after a year.
Tips
- Mead takes patience — it usually tastes much better after 6–12 months.
- If it’s too dry, you can stabilise it and back-sweeten with more honey.
- For sparkling mead, bottle before fermentation completely stops (similar to cider/beer brewing) — but this requires care to avoid exploding bottles.
