Maraschino Wines, Sherries, and/or Meads
- 4 lbs honey (it’s the size jar I had; 3 1/2 lbs should have been enough)
- 2 lb 5 oz jar of Mezzetta’s maraschino cherries
- 4 oz Hershey’s Cocoa Powder
- 2 1/4 tsp acid blend
- 1 1/4 tsp yeast nutrient
- 1/8 tsp yeast energizer
- 3/16 tsp grape tannin
- 1/16 tsp potassium metabisulfite
- water to 1 gallon
- 1 pkt Gervin Wine Yeast Varietal B (
- S. cerevisiae
- ) [alternate: Lalvin 71B-1122]
I began a yeast starter the night before, using one cup of lukewarm water (98 degrees F.) into which I added 1/2
teaspoon of sugar and a pinch of nutrient. I sprinkled the yeast onto the surface, covered the jar with a napkin
and set it aside to culture.
- 4 lbs honey (it’s the size jar I had; 3 1/2 lbs should have been enough)
- 2 lb 5 oz jar of Mezzetta’s maraschino cherries
- 4 oz Hershey’s Cocoa Powder
- 2 1/4 tsp acid blend
- 1 1/4 tsp yeast nutrient
- 1/8 tsp yeast energizer
- 3/16 tsp grape tannin
- 1/16 tsp potassium metabisulfite
- water to 1 gallon
- 1 pkt Gervin Wine Yeast Varietal B (
- S. cerevisiae
- ) [alternate: Lalvin 71B-1122]
Mix the honey with a quart of water in a large pot and bring to 140 degrees F. for about 25 minutes to kill any compromising organisms; skim foamy scum off surface (the higher the quality of honey, the less scum there will be). Set it aside to cool. Open jar of cherries and strain the syrup into the cooled honey. Chop the cherries, place in nylon straining bag, tie closed and set aside in bowl. Measure the cocoa powder in dry ounces and add to one pint of warm water in a blender until thoroughly mixed. Added tannin and other dry ingredients (less the yeast) to ensure all are well mixed, and then added this to the honey. Bring liquid to one gallon in primary and add activated yeast in starter solution. Add bag of cherries and cover primary. Punch down the bag of chopped cherries several times a day, checking their condition after several days. When they start looking ravaged by the yeast, remove the bag and gently squeeze it to extract readily available liquid — do NOT squeeze hard or the mead may not clear. When fermentation slows down, regardless of s.g., transfer to secondary and cap with an airlock. Allow fermentation to finish and rack it, but if it is still fermenting after 3 months rack it anyway. After 60 days rack again and top up with distilled water (this will not noticeably affect the flavor or alcohol level). Wait 60 days and rack again, topping up as before. Set aside one year to bulk age and allow the essential oils to break down. Bottle and age an additional 9 to 12 months before tasting. [Author’s own recipe]