Thursday, 30 May 2024

Bumbling Fools Mead In Minneapolis

From heavytable.com

People have been drinking mead nearly as long as they’ve been harvesting honey. While mead has a storied history, it’s not nearly as popular as beer and wine, despite some similarities. But that hasn’t stopped mead makers from pursuing their passions in a competitive beverage marketplace. The wine-like drink has always had an appeal to those who want something a little bit different, and that whimsical spirit drives Noah Stein and Skot Rieffer, who cofounded and opened Bumbling Fools meadery in the Como neighborhood of Minneapolis, beginning manufacturing in late 2021 and slowly expanding their taproom since. They take their mead making seriously, of course, but their mead names often poke fun at themselves and there is a playful spirit throughout, from the cartoony bees everywhere to the life size cutout of their first customer.

The meadery and taproom are something of a hidden gem, located at the corner of East Hennepin and 21st Avenue SE but lacking true signage on the busy Hennepin Avenue. The complex of formerly industrial buildings are primarily artist studios. This makes a trip to Bumbling Fools an adventure itself. There are two entrances to the building, both with wandering hallways that are colorfully adorned with pointing bee signs to get you to your destination. Once there, you’ll find a large Mead Hall event room and a small bar around the corner that fits the artist studio vibe. Reclaimed furniture gives a cozy and one-of-a-kind atmosphere with ample room to sip your beverage as you socialize, read a book or, on Thursdays, play trivia. Art shows take place the last Friday of each month in the building.

HEAVY TABLE: What is your origin story?

NOAH STEIN: About 8 years ago Skot and I happened to be making mead for the first time, separately and independently. We exchanged notes and bottles. Many years later, we said, “We should do that again but bigger this time.” So we made a bigger batch and different flavors and had some fun. We made some more and made some more. We were starting to do tasting parties…

The Massachusetts Renaissance Festival was doing their first mail-in mead homebrewing event, bringing in wine and mead judges from Europe. “They don’t know us and they know the game: they’ll be able to tell us why our mead is so terrible and what we can do to fix it.” Then the pandemic happened. I left my job. Skot left his job. Later that week the results came in and we won. Our traditional mead won Best In Show and Best Traditional. Our Bee Sting (jalapeño lime) won Best Experimental and third place overall. We looked at each other: “Maybe we’re doing something right.”

I’m probably not giving myself enough credit. Homebrewing is an odd hobby because there is frequently nothing to do; you’re waiting for it to age, ferment or whatever. So I spent a lot of that time reading and researching the science behind yeast and the history of wine … Considering that we both had more free time on our hands, we found the [small bar room] space across the hall. We moved in and started brewing. We got our license about two and a half years ago. We opened the bar about a year ago.

We started there. The landlords were very good to us. Due to the nature of the product, we cannot make a dollar off this for at least nine months.

Originally we were all distribution. We could sell bottles ourselves but we couldn’t pour drinks and we weren’t set up to do tastings. But after the first year we noticed this building does 4-5 art shows a year and is involved with Art A Whirl. On those days the building was getting great traffic. We set up a little table and did tastings in the hallway and it was very popular. Last year, in February, we decided, “Let’s get in on this.” 

The front room was storage and office and we shoved everything into the back, gave it a facelift, and turned it into a tasting bar and we were open for one of the art shows. It was massively popular and it was great. Shortly thereafter we realized that, because the majority of the honey we use comes from local Minnesota growers, we count as a farm winery, which means we can serve in the space where we manufacture. So we leaned into it and opened as a proper bar.

HT: How big a change has the taproom been for the business plan? You’re now a bartender?

STEIN: Right. It changed pretty quickly, going from all distribution to doing it as retail, essentially. Once we saw the potential we jumped right in. The profit is much larger. You are essentially giving up your Thursday and Friday and Saturday nights for the rest of time. [Laughs.] But eventually we’ll have an actual staff and can take the occasional weekend off.

Right away we started getting regulars. Trivia has been a big deal. We see people coming back every week and we see new people that haven’t been here before. And people see our sign and wander in and stay for trivia for a couple hours. It’s baby steps, but they’re all forward. It’s a comfortable place right now.

HT: It’s a bit of a stereotype, but I associate mead with Renaissance fairs. Do you have a background in that scene or do you play off that association?

STEIN: It’s an odd but significant section of the market… I do work at the Ren Fair. My sister owns a sewing shop so I’m there several weekends out of the year, but the mead at the Renaissance Festival is through J. Bird Wines and it always has been. White Bear Meadery are the Viking bar with wolf pelts and Viking memorabilia and their mead is named after Norse stuff.

We weren’t interested in fighting over [branding]. Mead is heavily associated with Vikings. It features pretty heavily in their stories but literally everywhere in the world that had honeybees had mead – even if they called it different things in Greek, Danish and Swedish, in Africa – that’s one of the things we try to recognize and play to… We make the Egyptian mead. We’re working on something approximately Scottish. The Bee Sting with jalapeño and lime. We like to get weird and experimental.

HT: How do you pick what is on tap at a given moment?

STEIN: The Traditional, The Featherweight, and the Two Ravens are always available. The Featherweight is probably our most popular. The Traditional is our solid, classic mead that’s very popular. Two Ravens is my favorite. It was one of the first flavored meads we’d done, so we’d had a chance to really dial in the recipe. 

Aside from that, we did the Queen’s Kiss for the first time last year. When we ran out people were sad, so we made some more. The Caramel Apple is new. Froop? We did it on a whim and it was well received, so I had to turn around and make more. We have a board out there where we ask people for flavor suggestions. We just talk with people and come up with ideas. I have a book of old world mead ideas I flip through sometimes.

HT: You also do custom mead. Is that a sizable part of your business or more special events?

STEIN: [There is a cutout of Mark in the bar.] Mark doesn’t work here. He is one of our first patrons. We were at a party and he handed me a body of New Glarus raspberry sour and said, “I want this, but I want it to be mead and blackberries.” So I took the bottle home and did some actual research (not just drinking it). Then I asked him how sweet, how sour, things like that. A week or two later he shows up at my door with 30 pounds of frozen blackberries: “I want however much this will make,” which ended up being about 11 gallons.

I want to get into more commissioned meads for weddings or big events. A wedding is one of the few big parties you know enough in advance to start and finish a mead.

The unspoken thing is if you order 5-10 gallons for your wedding reception I’m going to throw in a case of bottles for the couple, each with a tag: 1 month, 6 months, 1 year. These are your anniversary meads. They will keep better than the frozen top of a cake which isn’t meant to be frozen. Plus, the etymology of honeymoon is giving a couple enough mead to last one month.

HT: Do you find that most people who come in understand what mead is?

STEIN: It’s about 50/50.

It’s usually 3 answers:

  1. I’ve never had mead.
  2. I had it at the Renaissance Festival.
  3. Or I homebrew mead.

Honestly, it’s one of our big hurdles: getting people to bite and walk in the door. Mead is coming back a little bit but it’s still unknown. And what people do know about it from past experiences have been some dusty bottles of Chaucer’s sitting on the liquor store shelf for who knows how long or at the Renaissance Festival, which is intensely sweet and very different from what we do here. Our mead is much more like a dry white wine.

When people that have done some homebrewing come in, it’s a lot of fun to talk shop. There’s a lot of people in the world who have a little carboy sitting in the back of their coat closet quietly aging.

HT: How do you guide those first-time visitors?

STEIN: We usually start with The Traditional as an introduction. Beyond that we ask, “Do you like dry or sweet?” We have a flight. But for the most part, if people walk in our door, they are at least a little interested.

HT: Do you get foot traffic versus people seeking you out?

STEIN: More than you would think. We relied on word of mouth and it took us 2-3 months to put a sign outside. When we put a sandwich board outside, number of people took a chance on the long, weird hallway. There is a lot of walking traffic in this neighborhood: people who live 2-3 blocks away and never knew this place was here.

HT: What is your elevator pitch on how you are different than other meaderies?

STEIN: There are like 3 other meaderies in town and a couple others in Minnesota. What makes us different is that ours is a dry wine. We’re a little more accessible in Minneapolis. (The next closest is White Bear Meadery.) If we have a thing, it’s that we love bees and sustainability. All the furniture in this room came from the ReStore. And as many of our ingredients as we can [source] come from local communities. The vast majority of our honey comes from Stillwater, Jim’s Bees and Honey.

We try to be your very local mead haunt. We’re pretty casual about everything.

HT: How do you weigh experimental versus traditional?

STEIN: That’s one of our taglines that we toss around. Bumbling Fools: traditional and clever. I feel like we would be doing a disservice to ourselves just to focus on the tradition. A lot of homebrewers like to do wild ferments, open tank stuff. When we’re doing it commercially, we need a certain reproducibility. We make traditional recipes with modern practices. There is a lot of niche science with fermentation between chemistry and biology. We can get weird and experiment.

HT: Do you have a timeline for building out the taproom?

STEIN: We don’t want to go for classy or too far out there, but not full-on Cottagecore. It will probably look similar to what it is now but with new stairs, a lift, a wall, a stage, a bigger bar…and this old, stained floor.

Bumbling Fools Mead, 2010 East Hennepin Avenue #11-106, Minneapolis, THU 4-10pm, SAT 2-8pm, MON-WED, FRI, SUN CLOSED

https://heavytable.com/bumbling-fools-mead-in-minneapolis/ 

Saturday, 18 May 2024

UK: Cheers to 50 years of Cambridge Beer Festival as event returns to Jesus Green

From uk.news.yahoo.com

Cambridge Beer Festival is set to return to Jesus Green for its 50th event on Monday (May 20). The event will see more than 200 British real ales on sale at the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) event, as well as 21 low and no-alcohol beers.

A CAMRA spokesperson said: "We're delighted to announce the return of the Cambridge Beer Festival, 21–25 May, in our marquees on Jesus Green. The festival will feature over 200 British real ales from more than 100 breweries, 80 ciders and perries, an international bar, mead, and wine.

"In addition you can enjoy a variety of British cheeses, pork pies, scotch eggs, olives, bread, and more at Cambridge CAMRA's cheese counter." The event is open between 12pm and 3pm from Tuesday to Friday, and from 5pm to 10.30pm from Monday to Friday.

It is open between 12pm and 10.30pm on Saturday (May 25). Entry is free for some timeslots, but costs up to £6 for others.

Tickets are available online in advance or on the door. Event organisers said at least 80 per cent of capacity is kept for those paying on the day.

A spokesperson said: "Our bars don't accept cash. If you'd prefer to pay by cash, you'll need to purchase a token sheet from the cash desk inside the festival.

"The tokens will be valid at the beer, cider, mead, and wine bars, and also at our cheese counter. It will not be accepted at the concession stands." Visitors can also leave and return if they need to visit a cash machine.

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/cheers-50-years-cambridge-beer-125833889.html 

How to Bee Happy: Let Me Tell You About Mead

From resto.newcity.com

By Tom Keith

Scene: A guest comes over.

Person 1: Would you like a Melomel? A Pyment? A Braggot? How about an Acerglyn? Bochet? Capsicumel? Cyser? Hippocras, Hydromel, Tej, Metheglin, Morat, Omphacomel, Oxymel, or a Rhodomel?*

Person 2: Could you please speak English?

Person 1: I am. I’m a mazer.

End scene.

*These are various styles of meads. I’ll explain later what a few of them are, but there’s not enough bandwidth here to detail them all. You have heard of Google, right?

Mazer? What the heck is a mazer?

That was the question I got a few years ago when I’d brought a mead to a party. The questioner was an accomplished lawyer, and a dedicated foodie. Since I’d made the mead myself, I told him “Well, I guess I’m a mazer.” He’d never heard the term mazer. (Lawyers… really…)

It was a reflection of how far off mead is from most people’s radar screens. (A mazer is someone who makes mead, just as a vintner is someone who makes wine, and a brewer is someone who makes beer.) And, despite a small base compared to brewers, the Chicago area has a few commercial mazers making meads for us all. (More on that later, too.)

What is mead?

So, what is mead, really? Basically, it’s diluted, fermented honey, sometimes flavoured with other stuff. It may be the oldest fermented beverage in existence.

One story suggests that some honey once dripped into a tree stump, then rain filled the stump with water. Airborne yeasts got a hold of it. (You know we’re all surrounded by airborne yeasts, right? The Belgians have made an industry out of it, with some of their ales.) Someone then decided to drink the result, and, shall we say, got happy.

Mead is usually described as “honey wine,” although that’s not strictly accurate. By the usual definitions, fermented fruits (especially grapes) are considered wines, and fermented grains are considered beers (that sake you like should be called a rice beer). So, mead is its own category. (Just like mushrooms, they’re not plants, they’re not animals, they just do their own thing.)

Mead is even credited for the term “honeymoon.” It was historically served at weddings and given to newlyweds. The couple would drink it in excess for a “moon”—or month—after their ceremony to enhance fertility. So, drink mead, especially if: a) you want to procreate, or if not, b) you’re a woman on the pill, or c) you have a decent-sized stash of condoms nearby.

How is mead made?

In some ways, mead isn’t too tough to make. To make a beer, you have to coax the starches in the grains to become sugars (usually with amylase, an enzyme that naturally occurs on the grains). That allows yeast to have something to munch on (and poop out alcohol and CO2). With a mead, since you’re starting with honey, the sugars are already in there. (Although, if you want to nitpick, the yeasts really appreciate it if you give them a few more nutrients, just as some people may do better with multivitamins. The yeasts like the added nutrients. They’ve told me so.)

On the other hand, mead-making requires a lot of work. Luckily for us, it’s not human work. That honey that went into your 750ml bottle of an average mead took about 30,000 bees traveling 27,500 miles and visiting more than a million flowers to gather the nectar required for that mead. I’m just guessing, but I doubt you could get 30,000 humans to travel 27,500 miles and visit a million flowers to get their share of the price of a bottle of mead—even an expensive one, at $50 or so.

Based on watching the honeybees in my backyard catmint plants, I can authoritatively state that each bee typically spends under one second on each flower, so using that, each 750ml bottle of mead may represent approximately 300 hours of work; hence the term “busy bee.”

                                                               Wild Blossom Meadery & Winery/Photo: Tom Keith

Where can I buy mead?

In addition to the meaderies themselves, and a limited few restaurants, most good liquor stores will have a small selection of meads—a recent visit to my local store found thirteen bottles of mead, among its many thousands of bottles of liquors, wines and beers.

Mead is the fastest growing of all major fermented beverages—albeit from a small base. Between 2011 and 2014, the American Mead Maker’s Association reported mead sales had grown 130 percent. Craft beer sales in that period grew just thirty-nine percent, and wine sales a scant six percent.

Talk with a Mazer

Driving down the 4000 block of Elston Avenue the other day, I noticed a rather enigmatic sign. It was a large picture of a bee, encased in a dripping hexagon. Why was there a picture of a bee on Elston Avenue?

Peter Schultz knows why. He’s the mazer at Second City Meadery.

“I started brewing because my wife was really into mead. I was really into beer. We would go to dates to Haymarket, and she found out pretty quickly she was not into beer. But Haymarket serves a variety of things, so she was able to try a bee nectar.

“After graduating, I was a CPA for seven years. It’s as catastrophically boring as you can imagine. So, my wife sees me home-brewing, really loving it, and going to a cubicle every day and really hating it. She started pushing me to make this my job.”

What should a mead be? And I don’t mean it as “bee.”

“Yeah, there’s a lot of puns in the industry, for sure.

“A mead should be smooth, with no off flavors. It takes a long time to figure out how to do that. It took me two years of homebrewing before I learned how to make good mead and ferment honey, without off flavors. I like mine a little more on the luscious side, a little more thick, with a heavier body. I like mine sweet, but I also like it balanced with a lot of fruit acidity. You have to use interesting honeys.

“Like, wildflower is great for some things, but it can only get you so far. What I strive to do is make people taste things they haven’t tasted before. That’s why I love honeyberry. I love Szechuan peppercorn, ingredients that people aren’t that familiar with.

“I love raspberry mead, but I know what it tastes like. If I’m gonna do a raspberry mead I want to use a weird honey or I want to use raspberry and some other fruit that’s less popular, or some spice that’s less popular.

“When we opened, so many people would come in and they would say ‘tell me about mead; I’ve never had it before.’ Now I’m getting a lot more that ‘we’ve had mead, but we’ve never been here. Tell us about your mead.’ So that is a big difference. I’m excited for three years from now, five years from now. But it would be tough for me to see it growing the way craft beer did. It’s a little more boutique. It’s not gonna be that all of a sudden there’s 200 meaderies in Chicago—that’s never gonna happen. But if we could get a dozen meaderies, twenty-five meaderies in Chicago in the next five or ten years—that would be incredible.

“It’s been interesting to see who’s easier to convert to a mead lover. It’s not wine people. It’s beer people. Like, if you already like barrel-aged stouts, mead is not that far off, in terms of mouthfeel and flavor complexity.

“People like mead. It’s made from honey, so immediately they think it’s gonna be super sweet. You pull out a dry. Yeah, and they’re going to question… this has honey in it? It’s great to blow people’s minds that mead can be dry.”

Types of mead

Basic or traditional meads are simply diluted fermented honey. But there are so many variations—dry, sweet, still, sparkling, as alcoholically strong as a port, or as weak as a light beer; here are a few.

  • Melomel—while it sounds like a character named Mel in an R. Crumb comic, it’s actually a mead flavoured with fruit.
  • Metheglin is a spiced mead. The name comes from the Welsh language word meddyglyn, meaning healing liquor, for its supposedly medicinal qualities.
  • Braggot doesn’t refer to your friend with a massive ego. It’s basically the bastard child of mead and beer: a beer made with roughly as much honey as beer ingredients.
  • Cyser, similarly, is a mead made with honey that’s diluted with apple juice (which is why the name resembles “cider”).
  • Pyment uses grape juice instead of water to dilute the honey before fermentation.
  • Acerglyn is a mead made primarily with maple syrup. Its flavors are somewhat similar to fenugreek.
  • Bochet is a mead where the honey is boiled and caramelized (a very messy operation—boiling honey foams up like crazy). The caramel flavors come through.
  • Tej is an Ethiopian version of mead, frequently available at Ethiopian restaurants. It’s distinguished by its use of gesho (the bark of a local buckthorn shrub) for flavouring. In Ethiopia, it’s often homemade, so versions can vary significantly.

A Few Chicago-Area Meaderies

Wild Blossom is Chicago’s oldest and largest meadery, an offshoot of the home-brewing store Bev Art, originally in the South Side’s Beverly neighbourhood. Both are now located in a large, modern building at 9030 South Hermitage. Most large liquor stores will have a few of their bottles. Wild Blossom is distinguished in that it attends to its own beehives and produces its own honey.

Manic Meadery is Peter Schultz’s favorite meadery in the Chicago area. “I can’t say enough good things about Manic Meadery. Easily one of my favorites.” It’s at 1003 East Summit, Crown Point, Indiana.

Second City Meadery is a small-batch meadery that you already know about if you’ve read this far. 4465 North Elston.

Standard Meadery is a meadery associated with a tiki bar. 11 West Park Boulevard, Villa Park.

Misbeehavin’ Meads is a meadery that focuses on making meads with a focus on fun. 65 Franklin Street, Valparaiso, Indiana.

Pips Meadery also offers wine and cocktails. It’s in the former Only Child Brewing space. 1350 Tri State Parkway, Gurnee.

https://resto.newcity.com/2024/05/17/how-to-bee-happy-let-me-tell-you-about-mead/ 

Thursday, 16 May 2024

Retro Meadery introducing a different taste to North Carolina this summer

From wwaytv3.com

BURGAW, NC (WWAY)– There’s a new business coming to Downtown Burgaw, and it’s the first of its kind in the Cape Fear Region.  

Two men and some friends started experimenting with some simple ingredients to develop their recipe for mead.  

“Mead is pretty much a honey wine. Instead of using grapes, we use honey to make our wine.”   

That’s “mead”, not to be mistaken for “meat”, because this may be the first you’re hearing of it.   

“Mead is the first known adult beverage in the world. Before there was beer, before there was your traditional grape wine, there was mead,” said Michael Fields, Co-Owner of Retro Meadery. “A lot of people haven’t heard of it because being that you use honey, honey is a more expensive product to use to make an adult beverage.”   

Fields, along side his Co-Owner, Matthew Clemmons and other friends, decided to make mead one day. And after many attempts to perfect their craft, “Retro Meadery” was born.   

“A couple of friends got together, we decided to make some mead together. Our first batch turned out not so well, so we decided to get some quality honey and try it again. After multiple different batches, we shared it with friends and family who really enjoyed it, and said to ourselves ‘hey maybe this is something we can do’,” said Fields.  

Retro Meadery is brand new to the business world, but is quickly becoming increasingly popular, as it is the only meadery on the North Carolina coast.   

“Last year has been one full year of us in business. We did very well last year,” said Fields. “The demand for our mead has been overwhelming to where we actually just purchased two more tanks, and we are expecting to double our profits this year and grow from there.”  

Retro Meadery is set to open this summer in Downtown Burgaw as a tasting room that will feature vintage arcade games, hence “retro”, and other activities.  

“Burgaw is growing, and we just figured this is a place that we can bring something special, and also with our tasting room, some entertainment,” said Fields.  

Michael Fields and Matthew Clemmons are both Brunswick County natives.   

Their mead is completely made in Burgaw and is sourced by local ingredients and supplies from other businesses in the Cape Fear.   

Fields notes that it takes about two weeks for fermentation, and depending on what batch is being made, it may take anywhere from one to five months of aging before it’s ready to be bottled. He also adds that each batch requires 245 pounds of honey. It can be dry, semi-sweet, or sweet. 

The grand opening for Retro Meadery is projected to be in mid-July of this year. 

The meadery is located at 112 South Dickerson Street in Burgaw, right across from the train depot.

https://www.wwaytv3.com/retro-meadery-introducing-a-different-taste-to-burgaw-this-summer/ 

Wednesday, 15 May 2024

Mead Will Hit Big Revenues In Future

From openpr.com

The Latest Market Research Study on "Global Mead Market" is now released to provide a detailed overview of hidden gems performance analysis in recent years. The study covers an in-depth overview of market dynamics, segmentation, product portfolio, business plans, and the latest developments in the industry. Staying on top of market trends & drivers always remains crucial for decision-makers and marketers to keep a hold of developing opportunities.

Some of the major players such as B. Nektar Meadery (United States), Bee & Bramble Meadery (Canada), Dansk Mjød (Denmark), Gosnells Mead (United Kingdom), Havoc Mead (United States), HoneyMoon Brewery (United States), Kinsale Mead Co. (Ireland), Lancashire Mead Company (United Kingdom), Lurgashall Winery (United Kingdom), Meridian Hive (United States), Moonlight Meadery (United States), Sap House Meadery (United States), Schramm's Mead (United States), Shramrock Mead (Ireland), Superstition Meadery (United States)

According to HTF Market Intelligence, the global Mead market is valued at USD Million in 2023 and estimated to reach a revenue of USD Million by 2030, with a CAGR of 15.80% from 2023 to 2030.

Request Customized Sample Now @ https://www.htfmarketintelligence.com/sample-report/global-mead-market?utm_source=Sweety_OpenPR&utm_id=Sweety

Mead Market Overview

Mead is an alcoholic beverage made by fermenting honey with water, often flavoured with fruits, spices, or herbs. Software for mead production could assist with recipe formulation, fermentation monitoring, inventory management of ingredients, and compliance with regulatory requirements for alcohol production and distribution.

Mead Market Competitive Landscape & Company Profiles

The Company's Coverage aims to innovate to increase efficiency and product life. The long-term growth opportunities available in the sector are captured by ensuring constant process improvements and economic flexibility to spend in the optimal schemes. Company profile section of players such as B. Nektar Meadery (United States), Bee & Bramble Meadery (Canada), Dansk Mjød (Denmark), Gosnells Mead (United Kingdom), Havoc Mead (United States), HoneyMoon Brewery (United States), Kinsale Mead Co. (Ireland), Lancashire Mead Company (United Kingdom), Lurgashall Winery (United Kingdom), Meridian Hive (United States), Moonlight Meadery (United States), Sap House Meadery (United States), Schramm's Mead (United States), Shramrock Mead (Ireland), Superstition Meadery (United States) includes its basic information like company legal name, website, headquarters, subsidiaries, market position, history, and 5 closest competitors by Market capitalization/revenue along with contact information.

Market Trends



The craft meaderies specialized market has proved to be of great significance for market expansion. These craftsmen are artisanal and do heavy small-batch crafting paying attention to using weak strands and traditional methods. These present the blend of old and new using introducing brand-new tastes. Mead, a class of craft beer started to get recognition and we wanted our beers to have more variety of styles and ingredients than available in a market with a large assortment of kinds. The different mead beverage manufacturers blend multiple flavors and add various flavors if get a chance for the consumers to get the tastes of a lot of products that will sell in the market. However, the traditional wild mead is still the most coveted choice, and nowadays the craftsmen show great attention to creating meads soured with fruits, meads with spices, meads that are aged in casks, and meads with different herbs. The way of naturally produced tea with no additives happened because the taste of customers started evolving and could not have the same old-fashioned flavours anymore. 

Mead is the oldest known alcoholic beverage that belongs to a large class of humans today. It is unique due to the long history of the traditions embedded and the cultural value that the lands it inhabits have. In full swing, the novel question to end up would be to travel the world, of course, trying one term of mead, which may vary from Ukrainian Rosolio and Ethiopian tej to Viking Blod and Krupnik, respectively. These regional differences are what differentiates a local craft beer from another one. From a specific area, the different tones of the same beer might be encountered, which makes the experience of drinking a craft beer uniquely remembered when a beer lover is recounting his journey of tasting different kinds of beer brewed (techniques and tastes).

Market Opportunities

Consumers nowadays care about the beverages where the popular choice would be that of a healthy drink which is an alternative to sweet alcoholic drinks. As mead is based on the ancient and natural ingredients such as honey, water and fruits, it can quite quickly take advantage of the trend by marketing itself as a natural paleo, gluten-free, and potentially less alcoholic beverage compared to other others. 

Mead offers a plethora of possibilities when it comes to mixing their drinks, from the traditional honey-made mead, to the experimental fusion of fruits, spices, herbs, and botanicals. Here is a new scope for mead-producers to mix diverse flavour combinations and manufacture unique stuff which is liked by variety of at the convergences of different culinary traditions. Mead producers can grab the boom due to disseminated pattern of liquid education and tasting adventures. Offering guests tours, tastings, and educational events at meads can help to not only entice the consumers but also educate them on the history, production processes, and tasting notes of each mead, which will, in turn, build lasting customer relationships and augment consumer loyalty.

For More Information Read Table of Content @ https://www.htfmarketintelligence.com/report/global-mead-market?utm_source=Sweety_OpenPR&utm_id=Sweety

https://www.openpr.com/news/3494476/mead-will-hit-big-revenues-in-future-lancashire-mead-company 

Saturday, 4 May 2024

USA: CEA Retail & Hospitality Winner: Marketing Mead To The Masses

From wilmingtonbiz.com

As Southeastern North Carolina’s only commercial mead maker, Retro Meadery has given many local customers their first taste of mead – a fermented mixture of honey, water and yeast.

Many first-time customers have never heard of mead before, said Michael Fields, who co-founded Retro Meadery in 2020 with friend Matthew Clemmons. Others come with assumptions about how the mead will taste.

Many people think of mead as really sweet, Fields said.

“In reality, it’s just like wine – you can make it really dry, you can make it semi-dry, semi-sweet to sweet to dessert wine,” he said. “We kind of have a range of that for every flavour palate.”

The Burgaw-based company started to form in 2020 when Fields, Clemmons, and a few other friends made a beer kit and mead kit.

“The beer kit came out fantastic,” Fields said. “The mead kit did not.”

They decided to give mead another try, using a higher-quality honey. They continued to experiment with mead-making, giving samples to their family and friends. Eventually, they started hosting larger tasting events and began fundraising to support a mead-making company.

Although they hoped to establish a tasting room early on, those plans didn’t pan out. But that gave them time to introduce the area to the mead they make, Fields said.

RETAIL & HOSPITALITY | Retro Meadery | Michael Fields, Co-Founder | Year Founded: 2020 | Employees: 5 (Photo By Madeline Gray)


Retro Meadery produces its mead in a facility retrofitted with five 79-gallon tanks. The process of making mead is simple, according to Fields, who serves as the company’s head mead-maker.

“Depending on how you make your mead, you can change it up a little bit,” he said, “but it’s still pretty much honey, water and yeast.”

Retro Meadery adds fresh ingredients, ranging from elderberries and apples to limes, lemons and oranges, to the mead to create its signature flavours. The mead typically ferments for about two weeks and then ages for one to four months before it’s ready to be bottled.

The aging process helps remove carbon dioxide from the mead, which can improve its taste, Fields said.

“The longer you let the mead age, that alcohol bite tapers off and makes it really a smooth mead to have,” he said.

Retro Meadery currently has nine different mead flavours in production, including Cinnapede, its most popular apple and cinnamon-flavoured mead. The name and branding for each flavour taps into retro themes and nostalgia from the ’80s and ’90s, Fields said.

Cinnapede, for instance, references the classic Atari game Centipede, while other flavours include references to Monty Python and Saved by the Bell.

Fields said Retro Meadery is in the process of outfitting its own tasting room across from the Burgaw Train Depot in downtown Burgaw, with plans to open the space in June. The company is also in talks with a distributor to expand its reach within North Carolina and hopes to begin distributing outside of the state in the future.

https://www.wilmingtonbiz.com/cea_retail_and_hospitality_winner_marketing_mead_to_the_masses/2024/05/03/cea_retail_and_hospitality_winner_marketing_mead_to_the_masses/25560