I have made about 15 gallons over the last two years. The first 5 gallons (sweet agave mead) were awesome and tasted great. The last 10 gallons were bad. I tried several varieties of honey including store bought clover and two seasonal honeys from the same hive. Sadly the sweet agave mead was the best and most expensive. Mead is super basic. It is water, honey and yeast. Here's my recipe if you are interested:
Date: 1/17/09
Ingredients:
Blue Agave Extract
Clover Honey (unfiltered/uncooked)
Undistilled Aquifer Water
Sweet Mead Yeast (whitelabs: wine/cider/mead)
Procedure:
Bring three gallons undistilled (aquifer) water, 2.5lbs Blue Agave Extract and 6.0lbs Clover Honey to 130°. Chill must to 75°. Transfer to fermenter. Pitch Sweet Mead Yeast. Cap and apply bubbler. Place fermenter in 72* cabinet for fermentation process. 1/17/09 @2000hrs
Details:
Ingredients equaled approximately 4 gallons in graduated fermenting bucket.
O.G. = 1.080
Water = 3 gal
Blue Agave Extract = 2.5lbs
Clover Honey (uncooked/unfiltered) = 6.0lbs
Sweet Mead Yeast = 1 jar/5gal
Abstract:
Our anticipation is that the Fermentation process will begin in 5-15hrs and last one month. At which time, we may rack to bottle or possibly rack to secondary prior to bottling.
Bottled:
We bottled the mead on 2/13/09 and measured a gravity of 1.078. A second reading at 2/20/2009 gave a gravity of 1.075.
Conclusion:
Mead was extremely sweet and clean. The Agave note was strong, but not overbearing. After the bottles were racked to condition for 30 days, some bottles became over carbonated and others produced no further carbonation. The last bottle was finished April 14th, 2009.