Sunday, 28 May 2023

Brimming Horn Meadery now serving in downtown Seaford, Delaware

From baytobaynews.com

SEAFORD – On her day off, Kelley Coleman of Milford made it a point to stop in for the opening of the Brimming Horn Meadery’s new downtown Seaford location.

“Everyone is very excited to see this here,” said Ms. Coleman.

The new Seaford location at 106 Spring Street officially opened last Friday, augmenting Brimming Horn’s Milton location, which celebrates its sixth anniversary this year.

The Seaford site will serve in a similar capacity to the Milton property as a tasting room, showcasing the honey, yeast and water based alcohol beverage.

Seaford will be the main production facility, for both locations.

“Ninety percent of it will be here (Seaford),” said Brimming Horn founder/owner Jon Talkington. “We’re excited to be here.”

At the July 12, 2022 meeting, Seaford city council approved a lease agreement with Brimming Horn Meadery and its proposal presented by Mr. Talkington and business partner Robert “J.R.” Walker Jr.

Mr. Talkington at the council session said the hope is for the Seaford location to become a “regular hangout for friends, neighbours, and travellers to share drinks, music, and fun just like our Milton location.”

Lorcan Black of Dover purchases the commemorative first shirt at the May 26 opening of the new Brimming Horn Meadery in downtown Seaford. Ringing up the sale is employee Paul Kress.
DELAWARE STATE NEWS/GLENN ROLFE
Lorcan Black of Dover purchases the commemorative first shirt at the May 26 opening of the new Brimming Horn Meadery in downtown Seaford. Ringing up the sale is employee Paul Kress.


Making mead keeps bees busy.

“Mead is made from honey. Honey is the main fermentable,” Mr. Talkington said. “We add other things to it, but it has to be over 51% (honey) for mead.”

Several patrons were on hand at the noon opening Friday, May 26. They purchased samplers with various offerings.

Matt Behler, among the handful of employees at the Seaford site, explained the serving procedure.

“The way that we serve this is, we have all different kinds of flight sizes,” Mr. Behler said. “Once we know what size it is we take the meads that they want to try, and we put them in order from dry to sweetest. And the reason why we do that is because when you drink something that is really sweet, and then you try and drink something that is dry, you can’t taste it as well because the sweetness coats the palette.”

Mr. Talkington is the head mead-maker, Jenna Mica is assistant mead-maker and Mr. Walker is owner and business manager.

Brimming Horn has earned numerous awards for its mead.

Besides assorted types and flavors of mead, the business sells merchandise, including drinking horns, T-shirts and hats.

While food is not sold at the Brimming Horn, patrons are welcome to bring food in from other restaurants.

Open hours currently are noon to 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays.

Brimming Horn Meadery
106 Spring St.

Seaford, DE 19973 

https://baytobaynews.com/stories/brimming-horn-meadery-now-serving-in-downtown-seaford,109127

Saturday, 27 May 2023

Moonshine Meadery Sets Its Sights on Gurugram, Haryana

From restaurant.indianretailer.com

The brand rapidly expanded its reach and established a presence in numerous regions across India to make its meads accessible to a wider audience 

Moonshine Meadery, the pioneering mead producer in India, recently revealed plans to extend its presence to Gurugram, Haryana, marking a significant expansion in its national reach. 

The objective is to cater to the growing demand for their exquisite meads among enthusiasts in the region. 

Furthermore, the company has confirmed that Moonshine meads are now conveniently accessible at various city wine shops from 24th April onwards. By extending its reach, the brand aims to introduce the younger generation of craft beverage enthusiasts across India to this age-old elixir. 


The initial offering in the Haryana market will include their renowned Coffee Mead, alongside the limited edition MeadLABS series, featuring enticing flavours such as Grilled Pineapple, Guava Chilli, Hopped, Salted Kokum, Chocolate Orange, Mango Chilli, and Bourbon Oaked Apple Mead. 

“Moonshine as a brand has experienced drastic demand over the past few years, helping make meads a mainstay in the Indian alco-bev space through innovation and expansion.” said Rohan Rehani and Nitin Vishwas, Co-founders of Moonshine Meadery. 

Moonshine Meadery, established in 2018 as the first meadery in Asia and India, had humble beginnings as a garage project initiated by Rohan and Nitin in 2014. 

The brand rapidly expanded its reach and established a presence in numerous regions across the country to make its meads accessible to a wider audience. 

Driven by robust consumer demand, Moonshine Meadery has achieved remarkable growth, experiencing a rapid annual growth rate of 100% over the past three years.

https://restaurant.indianretailer.com/news/moonshine-meadery-sets-its-sights-on-gurugram-haryana.n20993

Friday, 19 May 2023

Hive Mind Mead & Brew Co. launches canned sparkling mead

From pressreleases.responsesource.com

Hive Mind Mead & Brew Co. has launched a new range of naturally-flavoured sparkling mead in cans.

The new Hive Mind Sparkling Mead range is 4% ABV and comes in four flavours - ginger, elderflower, rhubarb and pure honey. For the first time, it will be available in 330ml cans, sold individually or as a boxed four-pack containing one of each flavour. Two more flavours, sour cherry and honey & hops will also soon be added to the range.

All of the company’s mead is gluten free, made with natural ingredients and uses British honey, including honey from its own hives in the Wye Valley, where its beekeeping supports local biodiversity, habitat conservation and important pollinator populations.

Showcasing their beekeeping heritage, the sparkling mead cans carry new Hive Mind branding, based around colourful honeycomb illustrations, and highlight the approximately 300,000 flowers visited and 50,000 miles flown by bees to make the honey for every can. The Sparkling Mead is launching on 20 May to coincide with World Bee Day - an international day of awareness in support of these vital pollinators.


The meadery was launched in 2018 as the Wye Valley Meadery by beekeeping brothers Kit and Matt Newell, and has recently rebranded as the Hive Mind Mead & Brew Co. The brothers have been pioneers in a UK resurgence in mead-making, taking one of the world’s oldest alcoholic drinks and creating new modern styles from session-strength light and refreshing sparkling meads through to stronger, more traditional wine-style and barrel-aged meads.

Hive Mind co-founder Kit Newell said:
“We’ve been creating new meads which have been at the forefront of growing interest in the product here in the UK, pioneering modern styles and changing perceptions of this versatile drink. Modern mead can stand head to head with beers, wines or spirits for its range of flavour profiles, as a base for cocktails or as a different option for food pairing.

“Our new session strength (4%) Sparkling Mead cans have been created to be light and refreshing, flavoured with natural and seasonal ingredients to make them a great summer drink for all occasions. Canning our sparkling mead makes it more portable for outdoor events, easy to chill and it’s a more sustainable option than glass.

“As beekeepers, we understand the importance of protecting nature, supporting pollinators, creating sustainable products and working as part of the community.
Our new Hive Mind brand highlights our beekeeping heritage and shares our company’s mission to help the honeybees through the honey we make and our low impact, low intervention approach to brewing, ” he said.

The Hive Mind Sparkling Mead range will be available nationwide from independent retailers, delis and farm shops or direct from Hive Mind’s website.

Other Hive Mind products include an award-winning wine-style Traditional Mead, Oak Whiskey Barrel-Aged Traditional Mead and honey beers including a 3 Star Great Taste Award-winning Smoked Honey Porter, a honey pilsner called ‘Nectar’ and a pollen-infused hazy pale called ‘Pollinator’.

https://pressreleases.responsesource.com/news/104051/hive-mind-mead-brew-co-launches-canned-sparkling-mead/ 

Thursday, 18 May 2023

A Taste of Ancient Times: How Honey Mead Has Captivated Palates for Centuries

From scoop.co.nz

Anyone who has ever seen a fantasy movie or played a medieval-themed game would know the significance of mead. Mead is the oldest alcoholic beverage known to man, predating both wine and beer by thousands of years. Mead history, in fact, is largely included in most academic research done on human history. The process of creating both wine and beer necessarily involves growing the crops used for it and the use of vessels such as barrels or pottery for storage and fermentation of these beverages. Mead is believed to have already been around even before planting crops and creating ceramic pottery was known.

Perhaps an even more interesting fact about honey mead is that it is fast becoming a preferred beverage by many home brewers today, as the ingredients are fairly simple and safe, and it is believed to be far safer to consume than most other alcoholic beverages. The popularity of honey mead today is such that there is an actual demand for it in the market, with many searching for sellers and even manufacturers online.

A Sweet and Intoxicating History

The exact historical date of the discovery of mead is practically impossible to trace, let alone trying to figure out who first made it. The primary ingredient of mead is honey made by honey-producing insects, which has a peculiar property of becoming naturally fermented. It is therefore quite easy to imagine some nameless person in history stumbling over an intoxicatingly fragrant sticky substance that brought about a better mood once imbibed.

There is archaeological evidence suggesting that mead was already present in northern China as early as 7000 BCE , although the earliest surviving written record of honey mead is mentioned in the Rigveda, an ancient collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns. The sublime taste and eventual inebriation that followed often led people to associate mead with divine origins, which is why alcoholic beverages are also largely seen in many religious rituals.

Considering that mead is known to have at least 8% to 20% alcohol by volume (ABV), it is quite easy to get inebriated with this beverage. Add to that the fact that it is not bitter or sour in flavour compared to most other alcoholic beverages, mead is historically known to have been consumed in large quantities wherever it could be found.

Does Mead have any Health Benefits?

There are many who claim that despite the detrimental side effects of alcohol overconsumption, there are benefits to be had from the practice of drinking moderately. This claim may be more applicable to mead than to other alcoholic beverages due to the fact that the base components are nothing more than water and honey that went through fermentation. It is not uncommon for others to add other components to it, adding to the flavour and even to the strength of the alcoholic content, but the base ingredients will always remain the same.

As such, the benefits of mead come mostly from the fact that it has a good amount of honey, one of the most popular superfoods known today. The known benefits of honey include:

Anti-inflammatory Properties

Although earlier cultures might not have known the concept of inflammation, honey was used in many early medicinal applications. Honey has been proven to have anti-inflammatory properties, and this fact was discovered early on when honey was used in the treatment of surface wounds. It not only brought down swelling and helped stem bleeding, but it also prevented any further infection of open wounds. This property did not diminish even when honey was consumed or mixed in with other components. A spoonful of honey is still the best home remedy known for a sore throat, which is a symptom of throat inflammation.

Upper Respiratory Tract Infection Treatment

One of the ironies of honey is that it comes from pollen-producing plants. Pollen is one of the most virulent allergens known to man, with severe pulmonary reactions coming from just a brief exposure to it. Honey, on the other hand, has been used since early times in treating breathing problems, particularly issues associated with upper respiratory infections. This is why honey is also known to stop violent coughing fits and even treat congestion brought on by colds. This is also why many throat-clearing lozenges have honey as an active ingredient, as it is known to provide almost immediate relief from most pulmonary and respiratory issues.

Helps Manage Gastrointestinal Issues

There are pathogens that cause prolonged suffering from stomach issues like gastritis, duodenitis and gastric ulcers. These issues are made particularly difficult to manage because they also interfere with proper digestion, which is why oral medications take far longer to take effect. Honey is easily absorbed by the stomach, and because of the viscous nature of honey, it could also line the insides of the stomach to trap and clear the pathogens that make stomach issues linger. Incidentally, honey has also been used throughout history to treat indigestion and even issues associated with bowel movement.

Where Could I Get Honey Mead?

With the burgeoning trend on superfoods and healthy alternatives, most people are trying to find where to buy honey mead online, although the more important concern here than where is the assurance that what is being bought is authentic honey mead and not some other alcoholic beverage being passed off as the legitimate thing.

There are legitimate sellers of honey mead to be found both online and in traditional shops, although a good amount of people also prefer to make their own, since the ingredients are quite simple and easy to acquire. In buying honey mead, an important consideration is to check the purity, quantity, and type of honey used in the product. It is always best to select and procure honey mead that is made with wildflower or natural honey and in a mixed percentage that is at least 51%, or a diluted honey to water ratio of 1:0.5.

https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU2305/S00288/a-taste-of-ancient-times-how-honey-mead-has-captivated-palates-for-centuries.htm 

Wednesday, 10 May 2023

What Is Mead, And What Does It Taste Like?

From thedailymeal.com

While walking the aisles at your local liquor store or the alcohol aisles at your local grocery store, you may have come across bottles of mead and wondered what it is and what it tastes like. It's often grouped with saké and other specialty wines, making you ask if it's just another wine varietal to mark off your list. If that's the case, why are there so many different types and flavours? Is it even wine at all?

If you've found yourself utterly stumped by mead but afraid to dive in without more information, you can rest easy. We're covering all the bases on mead, including the what, where, and why of how it's made, along with how it tastes, how much of a buzz you can expect to get from it, and what kinds of foods to enjoy with it. You may not become a total mead expert, but you'll certainly have a starting point to go out and try some (or maybe even try brewing your own). 


You may have discovered mead at a Renaissance festival

For those who frequent Renaissance fairs and festivals, mead is nothing new. It's on the menu right alongside giant turkey legs and is as much a part of the day for many festival-goers as the jousting tournaments and performers who refuse to break character. While you aren't likely to get any fancy mead at a Renaissance festival (more like the two-buck Chuck of Nottingham), it's a great way to get your feet — err, mouth — wet. 

While some of the foods and drinks you find at Renaissance fairs and festivals aren't authentic to the period, mead is an exception. According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, mead was akin to a sparkling table wine during the Middle Ages. While perhaps not on the tables of poor farmers and peasants, royalty in the Middle Ages certainly imbibed a goblet or two of mead at mealtimes. So go ahead, give it a try while you watch a pair of cosplayers duke it out for most authentic outfit and persona. Huzzah!


It's sometimes called honey wine, but mead isn't wine

Despite not actually being wine, mead is sometimes referred to as honey wine. In its most basic form, Mead is made from fermented honey and water. Wine, on the other hand, is made from fermented fruit juice (most often grapes). The use of the term "honey wine" to refer to mead likely comes from the fact that the fermentation process is similar to winemaking. 

Whether "honey wine" and "mead" can be used interchangeably is mostly a matter of preference, though there are some requirements for what constitutes mead. According to batchmead.com, it must be 60% or more fermented honey to be considered mead. While some wines may use honey as a sweetener or as one of the fermented ingredients alongside fermented fruit, they're not mead. So where does the confusion about terminology originate? According to the folks at Hidden Legend Winery, the Alcohol & Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, which regulates alcohol in the United States, required mead to be labelled as "honey wine" until 2016.


Is mead gluten-free?

Because the process of making mead typically includes water, honey, and sometimes yeast, most mead is naturally gluten-free. Before those among us with celiac disease and gluten intolerance rejoice, there is a catch. There's always a catch. 

Many craft meads available at restaurants and bars and in your local alcohol aisles are aged in barrels to produce unique flavour combinations to stand out among the competition. If the mead you're buying was aged in barrels or casks previously used to hold beer, slow your roll because it's no longer considered gluten-free. The same thing goes for mead fermented using brewer's yeast, which is a by-product of making beer and contains gluten. As long as you are sure your mead has not been produced in these ways, you should be good to go. Of course, the safest bet is to always check the label, as many meads produced in the United States now carry a gluten-free label. 


Mead has been made for millennia

Although you may just be hearing about mead for the first time, it's far from a new drink. In fact, it's considered the oldest alcoholic drink in the world. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the consumption of mead has been traced as far back as China in the 7th millennium BCE. According to NPR, it was also one of the preferred drinks of ancient Egyptians and Vikings. Wine Enthusiast magazine goes even further, asserting that mead can be traced back 20,000 years to prehistoric Ethiopia, where feral bees were making honey that was eventually fermented with water to make mead. 

Regardless of when exactly mead originated, we know that it's older than both beer and wine by thousands of years. According to Dave Goulson in his article, "The Beguiling History of Bees" for Scientific American, the oldest bee found preserved in amber is approximately 80 million years old. While it isn't a honeybee, that gives you some idea of the timeline we're working with. Where there were bees, there was honey, and where there was honey, there was mead. 


Mead was used medicinally in the past

Honey has many benefits that have been used medicinally for thousands of years. Several of those benefits are conferred on mead because the honey in mead-making is not typically heated to boiling. The Ancient Greeks believed mead was the nectar of the gods or the fabled ambrosia that confers immortality to those who drink it. It is referenced by the Sanskrit name "madhu" in the Rig Veda, a collection of Sanskrit hymns from between 1700 and 1100 BC, in which it is said there was a flowing spring of mead in the god Vishnu's heaven. The Romans also believed mead had properties of preservation.

Some varieties of mead contain additional spices and herbs thought to boost the medicinal properties of the drink. While there are no clinically proven benefits to drinking mead, the drink was used as a tonic for treating many ailments. The name for mead that has additional spices and herbs, metheglin, comes from the Welsh words "meddyg" for "medicinal" or "healing" and "llyn" for "liquor." 


The type of honey helps determine the flavour

One factor in a mead's flavour is the type of honey used to make it. You may already know that different types of honey are made when the bees that make it obtain pollen from a particular source. You've probably seen clover honey, orange blossom honey, and Manuka honey, but it also comes in varieties like sage, eucalyptus, acacia, chestnut, rosemary, and more! While the honey won't taste overwhelmingly like the flora used to make it, the varieties do have unique flavours and qualities that impact mead. 

The honey in mead is what gets fermented, so the honey itself is subtle, giving it a flavour somewhere between wine and beer. What distinguishes many types of mead is what flavours are added to it after the fermentation process. Some mead varieties go all in on honey and add unfermented honey at the end, while others add flavours from different fruits, herbs, and spices. Further adding to the complexity of flavour is the aging process some mead makers use. The best way to figure out what mead tastes like is to try a few!


There are many varieties of mead

There are many different types of mead. Most traditional mead (also called "show mead") is just honey, water, and yeast to help speed up the fermentation process. Sack mead, also called "great mead," has a higher ratio of honey to water than traditional mead. On the other hand, hydromel (also called "session mead") has a higher percentage of water. "Melomel" is the term for mead with fruit added, while metheglin is mead made with spices. 

Pyment is fermented with grapes (though honey is still the primary source of fermentation), while capsicumel (or spicy mead) has peppers added. Cyser is mead fermented with apples. Bochet is a mead made with boiled or caramelized honey. There are meads made with coffee and some that have maple syrup in place of a portion of the honey. In the African nations of Ethiopia and Eritrea, the variety of mead you'll find is called t'ej. What differentiates t'ej from other types of mead is the use of a medicinal shrub called gesho. Other regions have their own takes on mead, using different spices and herbs. The combinations are seemingly endless.


Mead's alcohol content varies widely

In general, the alcohol content of mead ranges anywhere from 3% by volume (ABV) to a whopping more than 20% ABV. Because there are so many different types of mead, it's probably no surprise that the alcohol content of different meads also varies a lot. Great mead (sack mead) has a higher alcohol content than other mead because it has a higher percentage of honey. More honey means more sugar to ferment into alcohol. Hydromel (session mead) is made with a higher percentage of water than honey and, therefore, naturally has a lower alcohol content. 

On average, a glass of mead has a higher alcohol content than a typical beer or glass of wine (save for the intentionally higher ABV beers and wines). That means you'll want to be careful as a mead newcomer. The drink of the gods can pack quite a punch!


Mead can be paired with lots of foods

As with alcoholic beverages, pairing mead with food is partly about personal preferences and partly about making sure your food can stand up to your drink (and vice versa). Traditional mead that is made with only honey, water, and yeast is relatively light and best paired with light dishes like seafood and salads. For sweeter, fruitier mead like melomel, you'll want heartier dishes (think strong cheeses and red meat) that add a bit of saltiness and savouriness. For dryer mead, try it alongside grilled vegetables and smoky meat. 

Another factor is acidity. Acidic foods can make mead taste sweeter, while those low in acidity can make the mead taste dry. If you have a spiced mead or a mead with added flavours, avoid competing flavours in your food choices. Of course, like wine, you can't go wrong with a mead and cheese pairing or mead and charcuterie.


Mead is mentioned throughout literature

It's no surprise that a drink as old as mead can be found throughout classic literature. In "The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer, we see mead used "The Miller's Tale" as a means of courting a "town-bred" lady. The drink has become so closely associated with the author that Chaucer's Mead has become the go-to mead at many Renaissance festivals.

In the epic poem "Beowulf," mead is a focal point of happiness and celebration in the mead hall known as Heorot. We're told Heorot is a place where mead flowed freely before the beast Grendel laid siege to it for 12 years. There, Beowulf meets and defeats Grendel, after which mead is consumed in celebration.

If poetry isn't your thing, you can always look to "The Lord of the Rings" for your literary mead fix. In J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle Earth, miruvĂłr is the reviving cordial of the Elves in Rivendell. As you may have guessed, given the restorative properties often attributed to mead in the Middle Ages and before, in the Elvish poem "NamáriĂ«" (Galadriel's lament), miruvĂłr is translated to English as mead. 


It's also a drink long enjoyed by royals

Of course, if a drink was said to be enjoyed by the gods, then royalty throughout history had to have it as well. According to Honey: A Global History by Lucy Long, King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, upon meeting, toasted with t'ej, the variety of mead found in Ethiopia and Eritrea. They weren't the only royals with a taste for mead, though. According to the British Library, Queen Elizabeth I preferred metheglin, with added herbs and spices. The story goes that the queen's beekeeper (bees at the time were used not only for their honey but for beeswax candles), Charles Butler, wrote down the recipe for her majesty's favourite metheglin, and it has purportedly been adapted to modern methodology and ingredients. It is still made today. 

Whether or not current royalty (in Britain or beyond) drink mead is up for speculation. However, it's certainly no longer a drink reserved for royals. 


The term honeymoon can be traced to mead

These days, a honeymoon lasts anywhere from a few days to a couple of weeks (likely limited by whatever personal or vacation time you can take off work), but the term describes a time when that period lasted for the cycle of the moon —a month. While the "honey" part of the name typically refers to the sweet period right after a wedding, its origins are in our favourite honey-based drink. 

The term comes from the Old English "hony moone" and the European tradition of supplying the newlyweds with enough mead to last them for a month. As we know, mead was thought to confer all sorts of medicinal and somewhat magical properties, such as health and immortality. Drinking mead for the moon cycle after getting married was thought to bring newlyweds good luck and fertility in their marriage, as mead was also thought to be an aphrodisiac. 


Craft mead is a booming trend

While you used to be able to find mead almost exclusively at Renaissance fairs and festivals, these days, you can find it practically anywhere you find beer and wine. Chris Weber, the then-president of the American Mead Makers Association, told NPR that in the year 2000, there were only 20 to 25 commercial mead makers in the United States, but by 2014 (when he gave his interview), there were nearly 250. That number has only continued to grow. According to the American Mead Makers Association, as of 2020, there were around 450 commercial meaderies in the United States, with an additional approximately 50 breweries and wineries that were making at least one mead product as part of their production. 

Whether the current rise in mead brands is due to its relative novelty or something else, there's no denying that mead is more popular now than it has been at any other time in the recent past.


You can brew mead at home

Whether you want to get in on the booming trend of making mead and start branching out into distribution, or you just want to try brewing it at home to see what you end up with, mead-making requires few ingredients and tools. The most important thing for any home brewing is sterilizing your equipment. The right gear, some high-quality honey (if you know a local beekeeper and can attest to its origin, even better), mead yeast, something to feed your yeast (also called yeast nutrition), water, whatever fruit and spices you'd like to add, and a recipe are the main things you'll need to get started. Well, that and some patience while the fermentation occurs. 

Perhaps you'd like to try your hand at Queen Elizabeth's metheglin, or maybe a traditional or session mead is more your style. If it doesn't come out perfect on the first try, don't give up. After all, if they could make mead thousands of years ago, surely you can pull this off. 

https://www.thedailymeal.com/1281044/what-mead-taste-like/

Sunday, 7 May 2023

Discover the origins of mead at Cape Town Meadery

From capetownetc.com

Did you know that the world’s oldest fermented beverage, mead, originated in Southern Africa, long before the Vikings brewed it?

The Khoi San discovered mead and even fermented it twice as fast as their European counterparts. Today, Cape Town Meadery is bringing this ancient African beverage back to the forefront, with a modern twist.

At Cape Town Meadery, you can taste and learn about the history of mead. Dr Ernst Thompson, the meadmaker, shares his knowledge and passion for mead during the tastings, which last around two hours. With limited group sizes, the experience feels intimate and personal.


The meads offered at Cape Town Meadery vary from the traditional to the unconventional, including sparkling mead, mead gin and even mead lager.

During the tasting, you’ll sample 10 different types of mead, including the Melaurea Mead Methode Traditionnelle, which is a sparkling mead with delicate bubbles and a dry taste, and the Braggot Lager, which is perfect for beer lovers. 

Cape Town Meadery uses organic Zambian honey in their production, supporting small rural communities and protecting natural forests and woodlands.

The mead also has a much lower carbon footprint than other alcoholic beverages, using only 5L of water to make 1L of mead compared to 1740L of water used to make 1L of gin.

Make a booking via Quicket to visit Cape Town Meadery and taste the variety of meads on offer. The limited tastings are currently available every second Saturday until 24 June. You can also purchase mead through their website.

Next time you’re looking for a unique and educational tasting experience, head to Cape Town Meadery and discover the history of mead while enjoying this ancient African beverage with a modern twist.

Details:

  • Location: Unit 27, The Old Timber Yard, 7th Avenue, Maitland
  • Opening times: Monday to Friday 9am to 3pm
  • Website: capetownmeadery.com
  • Book a tasting: Here
  • Cost: R120 per person