primary fermenter, and add the yeast. This is
called pitching the yeast. Close the fermenter, and put on the
airlock.
The airlock is a nifty little piece of hard plastic tubing, bent into
an S shape--looking and acting a lot like the drain pipe under the
sink. You put some water in it (about 1/2 an inch on each side of the
S, and the escaping gasses from the fermentation will push their
way through the water in the airlock. This allows the pressure to
escape, but leaves the fermenter sealed so nothing can get in from the
outside. (Youll understand it when you see one.) In anytime from a
day to a week from when you put the cover and airlock on, gasses will
begin to bubble out of the airlock showing you that the mead is
fermenting. All the books tell you this will start within a day, but
sometimes it takes a little longer. If it doesnt start in a week,
consider throwing in another packet of yeast and a teaspoon of yeast
energizer. You might also see if the room you have placed your
fermenter in is too cold. (Cement floors in basements radiate a lot
of cold and will slow your fermentation to a crawl, even if the room
is heated.) Ive had best results with the fermenter between 65P75!.
You might also take some care not to put the fermenter on a carpet.
Sometimes the fermentation will go berserk and foam will ooze out of
the airlock during the first week. Usually this only happens with
beer, but it can be a mess, so the fermenter should probably stay in
the kitchen.
In one to three months, you will see the fermentation slow to a stop
or near stop. This happens either because the yeast has converted all
the sugar to alcohol, or, more likely, there is a sufficient amount of
alcohol to kill the yeast (how did this stuff ever evolve?). This is
another reason for using champagne yeast--it is tolerant of higher
levels of alcohol, so you will get a much stronger brew.
You then need to bottle your mead. Soak the corks in water for at
least an hour if not a day before you bottle, to get them soft and
pliable. Sterilize the bottles, and the racking cane and tubing. The
racking cane is a siphon devide with the intake about a 1/2 inch above
the bottom level, so you dont get any of the yeast sludge into the
bottles. The sludge is pretty disgusting looking and tastes twice as
bad. You want to make sure not to disturb it. This means not
swishing around the racking cane. Its also helpful to put the
primary fermenter up on the table a few hours before you are going to
bottle, so any sludge disturbed will have time to settle. One more
thing--always siphon, never pour the mead, and sterilize the siphon
and racking cane.
Finally, you need to cork the bottles. Most kits come with one of two
types of corking devices. Both push the cork through a narrowing
passage that compreses it, so it will fit into the bottle neck and
then expand, forming a seal. The first is a plunger style device,
with a hole in the side. You put the cork in, and place the whole
device over the bottle, and then push down on the plunger and the cork
slides into the bottle. The second type of corker (and the one I
prefer) consists of two pieces of plastic. One is hollow, and you
place the cork inside of it. You then fit the second piece, over the
first. It has a stopper inside which pushes the cork down through the
hollow piece, into the neck of the bottle. I find this latter type a
bit more stable. I was always tipping over bottles with the plunger
type, this doesnt seem to happen with the two piece one. Very
occasionally youll get corks that simply wont go in. This is
usually due to a knot hidden in the middle of the cork. It usually
means chipping the cork out of the corker with a knife or pushing it
back the way it came.
Weve found the bottling works best in teams of three, one holding the
top of the racking cane in the fermenter (and avoiding the yeast
sludge), a second at the bottom of the siphon filling the bottles, and
a third person corking the full bottles. When we get down to the part
with the sludge, we usually put that in a separate bottle and drink it
as soon as its marginally clear to test the mead. It will probably
taste horrid, but this will change with age. If its vinegar, start
buying salad oil because theres not a lot more you