Thursday, 12 March 2020

History of Mead

From heritagedaily.com

Mead or “honey-wine” is a fermented honey drink with water that has been produced for thousands of years throughout Europe, Africa and Asia.

Mead – “fermented honey drink” – derives from the Old English meodu or medu, and Proto-Germanic, *meduz. The name has connections to Old Norse mjöðr, Middle Dutch mede, and Old High German metu, among others.

The earliest recorded evidence dates from 7000BC, where archaeologists discovered pottery vessels from the Neolithic village of Jiahu in Henan province, China that contained the chemical signatures of honey, rice and compounds normally associated with the process of fermentation.

Mead became present in Europe between 2800 to 1800BC during the European Bronze Age. Throughout this period, the Bell Beaker culture or short Beaker culture was producing the “All Over Ornamented (AOO)” and the “Maritime Type” beaker pottery. The beakers are suggested to have been produced primarily for alcohol consumption, with some examples of these pottery forms containing chemical signatures for mead production.

         Bell Beakers from the Logabirumer Feld in Leer (East Frisia) – Credit : Hartmann Linge

During the Golden Age of Ancient Greece, mead “hydromeli” proceeded wine and was a stable beverage of Grecian culture. Hydromeli was even the preferred tipple of Aristotle, in which he discussed mead in his Meteorologica.

The German classical scholar, W. H. Roscher suggested that mead was even the nectar or ambrosia of the Gods. He compared ambrosia to honey, with their power of conferring immortality due to the supposed healing and cleansing powers of honey, which is in fact anti-septic, and because fermented honey (mead) preceded wine as an entheogen in the Aegean world; on some Minoan seals, goddesses were represented with bee faces (compare Merope and Melissa).

This is supported in the archaic versions of the stories of the gods. The Orphists preserve a tale about the cruel guile of Zeus who surprised his father Kronos when he was drunk on the honey of wild bees and castrated him.

Mead “aquamulsum” or just “mulsum” was also common during the Imperial Roman era and came in various forms. Mulsum was a freshly made mixture of wine and honey (called a pyment today) or simply honey left in water to ferment; and conditum was a mixture of wine, honey and spices made in advance and matured (arguably more a faux-mead).

The Hispanic-Roman naturalist Columella gave a recipe for mead in De re rustica, around 60 BCE.
“Take rainwater kept for several years, and mix a sextarius of this water with a [Roman] pound of honey. For a weaker mead, mix a sextarius of water with nine ounces of honey. The whole is exposed to the sun for 40 days, and then left on a shelf near the fire. If you have no rainwater, then boil spring water.”

Alcoholic drinks made from honey would become very popular within the Early Middle Ages and Medieval Europe. This was especially so among the Native Brythonic cultures, Anglo-Saxons, Germans, and Scandinavians. However, wines remained the preferred beverage in warmer climates in what is now Italy, Spain and France.

Anglo-Saxon literature such as Mabinogion, Beowulf and the Brythonic writings of the Welsh poet Taliesin (who wrote the Kanu y med or “Song of Mead ) describe mead as the drink of Kings and Thanes. In the Old English epic poem Beowulf set in Scandinavia, Beowulf comes to the aid of Hrothgar, the king of the Danes, whose mead hall in Heorot has been under attack by a monster known as Grendel.

In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales – The Miller’s Tale, mead is described as the draught of townsfolk and used to court a fair lady. Chaucer also makes mention of spiking his claret with honey.
“He sent her sweetened wine and well-spiced ale
And waffles piping hot out of the fire,
And, she being town-bred, mead for her desire
For some are won by means of money spent
And some by tricks and some by long descent.”

                                      Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales – Public Domain

In later years, tax and regulation drove commercial mead out of popularity with beer and wine becoming the predominant alcoholic drinks. Some monasteries in England and Wales kept up the traditions of mead-making as a by-product of beekeeping but with the dissolution of the monasteries in the 16th century mead all but disappeared.

Finally, when West Indian sugar began to be imported in quantity (from the 17th century), there was less incentive to keep bees to sweeten foods and the essential honey to ferment mead became scarcer across Europe leading to its decline.


Tuesday, 10 March 2020

How to drink like a Viking in Carson (USA)

From dailybreeze.com

It's an offshoot of five-year old Honest Abe's cidery next door. SoCal Vibes sells Honest Abe's small-batch, farmhouse ciders — and mead, the drink whose popularity was rekindled by Game of Thrones.

Southern California’s only restaurant and bar that specializes in small batch hard ciders — and mead, too, Game of Thrones fans will be happy to know — is already being called a “hidden gem” by ardent fans who travel long distances for a taste of honey wine and other hand-crafted products in blue-collar Carson.

The bright, airy SoCal Vibes Brewery, Kitchen and Tasting Room is an incongruous sight amid a desolate and lightly travelled stretch of barren sidewalks, car repair shops and other  industrial properties on Main Street.

                                       (Photo by Chuck Bennett, Contributing Photographer)

It’s an offshoot of five-year old Honest Abe's cidery next door, which had an intimate, quirky tasting room that amounted to a couple of couches with space for about 20 people.

The hole-in-the-wall tasting room closed last year to make way for the restaurant and bar and is now solely a production facility for the rapidly expanding business.
“People come all the way from Ventura, Oxnard, San Diego, Riverside,” said owner Spencer Chambers. “People come that far just to try cider.
“Cider is made for pairing with food,” he added. “It adds a whole extra element.”

The idea all along was to open a bar and restaurant to showcase the winery’s products, which also includes sangria and brandy. But it took years to become reality.

First, there was 18 months of construction to turn what was a shell of a building into the spacious two-story bar and restaurant — a cosy upstairs lounge-style mezzanine is open to the public when not rented out for private parties — with an outdoor beer garden.

Then there was an ill-fated and short-lived partnership with a local craft brewer that resulted in Chambers taking over the entire operation himself. (A SoCal Vibes-branded India Pale Ale will be on tap — made by a local brewery — in a few weeks, in addition to the dozen or so local craft beers already on offer).

So while SoCal Vibes opened some months ago, it remains very much a work in progress with a deliberately  under-the-radar approach.

A soft opening was held Feb. 28 when a smoker that allows Chambers to cook brisket and ribs was fired up for the first time. A couple of hundred people showed up over the course of the weekend and the barbecue — sold at half price — was gone by Saturday evening.

“I haven’t really promoted it,” Chambers said. “I wanted to wait until we were all dialled in. We still don’t even have a real sign outside, but people keep showing up.”

SoCal Vibes sells Honest Abe’s small-batch, farmhouse ciders — some are barrel-aged — but they are not always to the taste of those accustomed to mainstream products like Angry Orchard.

So Chambers created a SoCal Vibes-branded cider, too, which are generally lower in alcohol than their more rustic cousins Honest Abe’s and are also sold in cans. Hard seltzers, which have exploded in popularity in recent years, should be on sale by summer.

Business has grown rapidly in recent years and doubled in one fell swoop when Disneyland put Honest Abe’s on tap.
Chambers was encouraged a few years ago when he began making 275-gallon batches of cider rather than tiny 15-gallons batches. Today, he brews 5,500-gallon batches of cider at one time.

                                       (Photo by Chuck Bennett, Contributing Photographer)

Mead has also grown in popularity in part due to the curious who have watched it being swilled in copious quantities on HBO’s fantasy saga Game of Thrones, which includes some Norse underpinnings.
Made from wildflower honey from Temecula, Chambers makes a half-dozen types with a new one coming on tap this month every few days in what’s being dubbed March Meadness (and, yes, you will be able to watch that annual basketball tournament with a similar name at the bar and restaurant).

Unlike many breweries, SoCal Vibes is open for lunch seven days a week and is open until 2 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays.
Chambers is already eyeing more growth, even if SoCal Vibes is still ramping up and refining its menu with the goal of becoming a destination for foodies.

“I’ve got a license for seven more tasting rooms,” he said. “So, I’m going to take the So Cal Vibes brand and open tasting rooms all around.”
“Most people who come in probably won’t even realize that it will all be stuff that I make,” Chambers added.

https://www.dailybreeze.com/2020/03/09/socal-vibes-how-to-drink-like-a-viking-in-carson/

Friday, 6 March 2020

New brews abound and mead madness (New Hampshire, USA)

From manchesterinklink.com

Ancient Fire

On Thursday, March 5, Ancient Fire Mead & Cider is releasing a new honey wine named Goldenwood (14.1 percent). It’s a four honey blend aged in a Four Roses bourbon barrel for nine months, creating a complex mead with a long, smooth finish. 
Between March 11 and 15, Ancient Fire will be dropping four new meads to celebrate its second anniversary (see events section below for more details). The first three will be available on March 11.

The first is Winter Hum (7 percent), which they released for the first time at their first anniversary celebration. It’s a draft style mead with cold brewed coffee and maple syrup. The cold brew comes from Swift Current Cold Brew and the maple comes from Four Saps Sugar Shack in Lyndeborough.

Next is Jackpot! (7 percent), a brand new draft mead, made from Hawaiian coffee blossom honey and flavoured with vanilla bean and tart cherries picked at the Ancient Fire property in Manchester. 

They are also releasing Bucka-Wheat Bonzai (15.3 percent), a barrel-aged honey wine made with two honeys and apple cider. It was aged for 10 months in a rye whiskey barrel. It’s described as being rich, complex and super flavourful like a baked apple dessert, but still smooth and approachable.

Finally, on March 13, Ancient Fire is releasing a new apple draft-style mead called Yet Another Cyser (7 percent), made with mesquite blossom honey and New Hampshire apple cider from Fall 2019. 

EVENTS

Ancient Fire’s 2nd Birthday will be celebrated from March 11 through 15. They will be celebrating with the release of four new meads (see above) and will be hosting two VIP ticketed events on March 11 and 12, and then open hours Friday, Saturday and Sunday that weekend. 
To close out the celebration, they will have Sangria Sunday on March 15 and will be bringing back a fan favourite sangria, the Tai Fighter. This is a riff on a Mai Tai cocktail, made with lime juice and a house-made bitter orange and brown sugar syrup and topped off with their mead Making Sand Castles, which is made with Hawaiian macadamia blossom honey. 
They plan on making this concept into a mead and releasing it later this spring.