Sunday, 23 April 2023

Is Mead Closer To Wine Or Beer?

From thedailymeal.com

Mead's storied past goes back thousands of years. An important element of many Norse legends, it is even the focus of a story in which two gods agreed to peace and spit in a vat to seal the deal. To preserve the energy of the pact, the spit is used to create a wise man named Kvasir, who is later killed by dwarves. The dwarves drain his blood and mix it with honey, creating the Mead of Poetry, which grants knowledge and the power to compose great poetry to the drinker. In mythical Valhalla, mead flows without end.

"Harry Potter" and "Game of Thrones" reference mead too, and may have been part of why mead-making surged in the U.S., with reports from the American Mead Makers Association saying that the number of commercial meaderies rose from 30 in 2003 to 300 in 2016. "There are about 480 meaderies in the U.S. at last check, which is a few months ago," AMMA President Greg Heller-LaBelle told us via email.

The fermented libation was long thought to be the world's oldest alcoholic beverage. The claim was made on the basis of evidence detected in 9,000-year-old jars from Hunan China. More recently, even older evidence of beer has surfaced from some 13,000 years ago in Israel, knocking mead off the throne of pre-historical booze, though Heller-LaBelle maintains "beer is definitely later," due to the way he says mead can spontaneously occur in nature. Clearly, this golden elixir has a lot to tell us about the world, but what exactly is it?


Honey on a spoon

Known by its sometimes alias, honey wine, mead can be mistaken for a fermented beverage made of grapes, especially since some meads contain fruit. Not everyone applies the term honey wine to mead, however.

Made of honey diluted with water and mingled with yeast, mead is so designated as long as the majority of its fermentable sugars come from honey. This distinguishes mead from beer, which gets its fermentable sugar from grains and sometimes hops. It also sets mead apart from wine, which ferments from grapes.

Like beer and wine, different types of mead are made from the addition of different ingredients or differing strengths. A weaker mead, around 6% alcohol by volume, is known as a hydromel. Sack meads, or fortified meads, are much higher in ABV, up to the 18% mark. Melomels are meads with added fruit or fruit flavourings and metheglins are spiced meads. A braggot is a mix of mead and beer.

So what exactly is mead closest to, beer or wine?


Live, laugh, mead

Like wine, mead can be still or sparkling, and sweet or dry. Also like wine, mead uses wine and champagne yeasts to accelerate fermentation. Mead is gluten free, where beer is not, and wine is (usually). Mead is also not boiled, unlike beer. Also unlike beer, mead takes a fair spell to ferment on the scale of months to like wine, years. Make that weeks to months for beer to ferment.

Overall, mead shares a few more similarities with wine than beer, but it is certainly a world apart. The sweetness that can be a characteristic of mead is also close to the flavour possibilities of wine, with mead gaining that extra honey flavour through back-sweetening, or adding honey once it has already fermented.

The global beverage market value for mead, beer, and wine has been reported at around $487M, $750B, and $339B, respectively, in the years 2020 or 2021. But with local recipes going back hundreds and thousands of years in areas around the world, from Ethiopia's Tej to Scandanavian Viking Blood, mead has a wide home turf from which to grow in popularity.

https://www.thedailymeal.com/1260714/mead-closer-wine-beer/

Thursday, 13 April 2023

Tucson Arizona's first meadery, Brillé Mead Company, is opening soon

From tucsonfoodie.com

An ancient beverage is making a brand-new appearance in Tucson.

With a grand opening on Friday, April 14, Brillé Mead Company will be the first meadery in Tucson, and only the fifth commercial meadery in all of Arizona. The meadery is a labour of love project for David Woods and his business partner Andrias Asnakew, who have been busy brewing up batches of their Ethiopian-inspired honey wine in anticipation of the big opening day.   


Woods and Asnakew both lived in Ethiopia before relocating to Tucson, where they met through a mutual connection at Zemam’s Ethiopian Cuisine. The business partners are eager to share their take on Ethiopian mead, known traditionally as T’ej in the East African country of its origin. Mead-making dates back to the fourth century in Ethiopia, and this nectar is still regarded as the country’s national drink. 

The meadery’s name Brillé is in reference to the berelé, the round drinking flask customarily used to serve T'ej, and thought to be the oldest style of drinking vessel still in use today.  

In an Ethiopian-style mead, a bittering herb is generally added to balance the sweet honey brew.  Traditionally, this is achieved with gesho, an herbal extract from a native East African tree, but a similar effect can be achieved with hops.  Yes, hops, the very same ingredient brewers use to add a subtle bite to beer. 

Woods and Asnakew will primarily use hops in their mead, which will also be enhanced with spices, fruit, and Ethiopian-origin coffee beans to achieve desired flavour profiles.  Local Arizona honey is the shining star of their recipes, and the mead-makers hope to utilize other ingredients representative of our region, such as prickly pear fruit, in their specialty batches.


Woods, like many mead-makers honing their craft, got his start brewing mead out of his own home, to be shared with family and friends.  Fuelled by positive feedback, he and Asnakew collaborated to perfect their interpretation of a traditional Ethiopian honey wine, eventually deciding to turn this passion project into a business concept.  

On a whim, Woods brought a sample of home-brewed honey wine to Eric Sipe, owner of Dillinger Brewing Company.  The two bonded over the beverage, as Sipe spent his pre-brewery days traveling to various countries including Africa, and was familiar with Ethiopian mead.  A plan was soon hatched to set up the Brillé meadery alongside the beer brewing tanks in the Dillinger Brewing Company production facility. 


Each business utilises its own separate equipment and vastly different ingredients, but the missions are the same — to create delicious unique beverages to be enjoyed by all.

In addition to the brewing space, Brillé Mead Company will also share the Dillinger Brewing Company taproom at the Oracle Road location.  Visitors to the taproom will be able to sample both Dillinger beers and Brillé Ethiopian-inspired mead when they stop by.  

Kolo, a traditional Ethiopian snack made with roasted and spiced barley, will likely be offered to pair with beverages, but for now, it is drinks-only (outside food is always welcome). Woods and Asnakew aim to eventually have their mead in restaurants, bottle shops, and taprooms around Tucson. 

The Brillé Mead Company/Dillinger Brewing Company shared taproom space is located at 3895 N. Oracle Rd., the grand opening takes place on Friday, April 14, and will be open from 3 - 8 p.m. on Tuesday - Friday, noon - 8 p.m. on Saturday, noon - 5 p.m. on Sunday, and closed Monday. For more information, follow Dillinger Brewing Company on Facebook.