Mead - meaning of word
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Mead



---- Mead is a fermentation alcoholic beverage made of honey, water, and yeast. It is sometimes known as "honey wine" (for obvious reasons) and is generally pronounced "meed" (International Phonetic Alphabet for English: ), though South Africans usually pronounce it "med", to rhyme with "red" (IPA: ). Mead was a favorite tipple of the Norse gods and heroes, e.g. in Valhalla, and the mead of Suttung, made from the blood of Kvasir, was the source of wisdom and poetry. The nectar and ambrosia of the Greek gods were probably draughts of fermented honey (see those articles and the history section below). A mead that also contains spices (like cloves, cinnamon or nutmeg) or herbs (such as oregano or even lavender or chamomile) is called metheglin. The etymon of this word is the Welsh language word ''meddyglyn'', meaning "medicinal liquor", as healing herbs were often stored as metheglin so they would be available over the winter (as well as making them much easier to swallow). Slavic ''miod/med'', which means "honey", derives from the same Proto-Indo-European root. A mead that contains fruit (such as strawberry, blackcurrant or even rose-hips) is called melomel and was also used as a delicious way to "store" summer produce for the winter. Mulled mead is a popular winter holiday drink, where mead is flavoured with spices and warmed, traditionally by having a hot poker plunged into it. Hippocras is spiced grape wine sweetened with honey. A grape-based wine with added honey is called a pyment. Cyser is made with (hard) apple cider and honey; braggot or bracket is made with malted barley and honey. ==History of mead== In Crete, fermented honey was an entheogen long before the introduction of wine, and bees remained sacred to Demeter. Mead was the drink of the Age of Gold, and the word for drunk in classical Greek remained "honey-intoxicated." (Kerenyi 1976 pp 35ff) Mead was very popular in Northern Europe where grapes could not be grown, but it faded in popularity once wine imports became economical. Mead was especially popular with the Slavic peoples and was called in Polish language ''miód'' (pronounced ), meaning honey. Mead was a popular drink among the Polish szlachta. During the Crusades Poland prince Leszek the White explained to the pope that Polish knights couldn't participate in the crusades because there is no mead in Palestine (region). In Finland a sweet mead called ''Sima'' (cognate with brewing), is still an essential seasonal brew connected with the Finland Walpurgis Night festival. It is usually spiced by adding both the flesh and rind of a lemon. During secondary fermentation raisins are added to control the amount of sugars and to act as an indicator of readiness for consumption — they will rise to the top of the bottle when the drink is ready. Ethiopian mead is called "tej" and is usually home-made; it is flavored with the powdered leaves and bark of "gesho", a Hop (plant) Basic taste#Bitterness which is a species of buckthorn. A sweeter, less-alcoholic version called "berz", aged for a shorter time, is also made. The traditional vessel for drinking tej is a rounded vase-shaped container called a "berele". Mead is probably also the origin of the word honeymoon as the father of the bride was said to give as a dowry a month's supply of the liquor. Mead is mentioned in many old north Anglo-Saxon stories, including Beowulf. Mead can have a wide range of flavors, depending on the source of the honey, additives called "adjuncts" (including fruit and spices), yeast employed during fermentation, and aging procedure. Mead can be difficult to find commercially, though some producers have been successful marketing it. Many meads retain some measure of the sweetness of the original honey, and some can even be considered as dessert wines. Drier meads are also available, and some producers offer sparkling meads, which (like champagne) can make for a delightful celebratory toast. ==How to make mead== ===Equipment=== Mead is made in fermentation vessel, preferably a glass carboy, an airlock and a rubber bung. These items can usually be found at a home brew supply store. The ingredients of mead are honey, filtered water, and yeast. Fruit or spices are optional. Mead is made in sanitized equipment to ensure food safety. Potassium metabisulphite is a common sanitizing agent. Those who are allergic to sulphites can use other sanitizing methods. Failure to remove all traces of this chemical from the equipment may result in poisonous or otherwise undrinkable mead. ===Starter recipe:=== 3 pounds of honey per gallon (U.S.). (For example, 15 pounds of honey are used with a 5 gallon (U.S.) carboy.) 1 pound of raisins.(optional) 1 packet of dry winemaker's yeast EC1118 or similar as well as yeast nutrient. Some vintners prefer to create a starter culture by preparing a mixture of one cup of room temperature sanitized fruit juice and the freeze dried winemaking yeast and placing it into a smaller one quart sanitized container fitted with a rubber stopper and airlock for a day or two until the mixture is bubbling. This container is kept at room temperature out of direct sunlight. This starter culture will cause the fermentation below to begin with vigor and may prevent the mead from failing to ferment. Honey is slowly added to a large pot half-full with water while heating. There is a common disagreement among mead makers as to whether you should boil the honey or not; mead makers have had success with either method. Boiling will alter the flavor, but will enhance the clarity of the finished mead. As the mead is heated over medium heat, it will just start to boil after the impurities have been cleared, as pure liquids boil at a lower temperature. After a time of heating the honey (which helps it dissolve and can also pasteurize it), the mixture is cooled to between (170°F/76°C) and (140°F/60°C) and the raisins are added. The mixture continues to cool, then is transfered to the carboy. Once it has cooled to room temperature (68°F/20°C), yeast which has been rehydrated is added to the honey/water mixture (must) and the airlock is put on. After being placed in a cool (68°F/20°C), dark place for a few hours or a day, the airlock should start to allow bubbles to escape. This is waste carbon dioxide (CO2) and shows that the yeast is processing the sugar into alcohol. The raisins rise to the surface of the fermenting mixture. If they block the airlock, the mead maker will have to rack. Stirring or agitating the mixture is avoided, as it may cause the liquid to rise up and spill out of the airlock. After a two to three week period the mead maker may want to rack the mead into a second sanitized carboy. An airlock is not necessary during primary (aerobic) fermentation. This racking will clear out the lees and allow the mead to clear faster. The mead is siphoned into the second carboy via a sanitized tube, usually filled it with sterile water to start the siphon. The mead is siphoned carefully to avoid splashing as excess oxygen at this point may cause an unpleasant taste in the final product. An airlock is placed on the second carboy. It is imperative that sterile conditions be maintained while the carboys are open to avoid infection. The mead is racked every two weeks until all signs of fermentation have stopped (usually when the airlock doesn't produce any bubbles for a long period of time—typically over 30 seconds between bubbles) and your mead has cleared. The carboy is clear enough when it is possible to read a newspaper through it. Then next step is to bottle the mead. Mead is generally sealed in sanitized bottles using airtight caps or quality corks. If the fermentation is not complete, pressure will build up inside the sealed bottles and cause them to explode. Mead is generally aged for at least 6 months in the bottle before drinking. ==Reference== *Karl Kerenyi, ''Dionysus: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life,'' 1976. Alcoholic beverages Slavic cuisine la:hydromeli

Mead



Since finnish is a finno-ugric language, and greek an indo-european, it seems unlikely "Sima" and "Zymurgy" are true cognates, maybe the finnish have borrowed their word from a russian source or something... Also, to a layman, it seems as likely the polish word was borrowed from a germanic source, as a native polish word, but I am not an expert of polish etymology... :Uhm? Miod in Polish means honey. It's a word common in all Slavic languages. It is either very early borrowing (but what is Germanic word for honey? And it's unlikely that Slavs would call honey mead because of Germanic alcoholic beverage, isn;t it? User:Szopen 15:36, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC) :: Hmmm, it seems that it is a cognate, (that is a word that originally stems from the same source) rather than a direct translation. Maybe this should be changed. The original germanic word for honey would be something like hunaga or honig... Proto-Indo-European has two roots related to honey, one *melith, meaning honey, one *medhu, meaning a fermented alcoholic drink made with honey. It seems that the *medhu evolved into honey in slavic, either from an early germanic borrowing or from a native word. I am no expert on slavic etymology. ::: The polish page is called "Miód pitny". My polish is hardly rudimentary, but I believe it would be translated to something like "drinking miod"(Miod for drinking). I wonder if that is a native word or a borrowed word... ...Hmmm, using "drinking" as an adjective like that seems wrong, maybe it should be "Drinkable miod" or something... === ETYMOLOGY === Hm.. IF medhu is from IE root, then it should be noted in article, and both "miod/med" given by me and Welsh words should be given only as example. I really do not believe that Slavs in IX century were calling their favourite drink by Welsh words... User:Szopen 18:05, 22 Jan 2005 (UTC) == Whose recipe? == Whose @#!%@ recipe is this, anyway? What is the world is "three pounds per gallon"? is that— :* 3 lb per imperial gallon = 2 lb 8 oz per U.S. liquid gallon or is it :* 3 lb per U.S. gallon = 3 lb 10 oz per imperial gallon Back in college, a friend and I got tripped up by a recipe like that when we tried to make some wine. It doesn't work very well to use the wrong gallons. User:Gene Nygaard 05:02, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC) :--> You're way off base. 3 lb per gallon is a general term, especially in mead making. Less is dry, more is sweet. No big deal. :An imperial gallon is roughly 1.2 U.S. Gallons. So yes, it can make a small difference if you're somewhere in the universe using imperial numbers. If for some haphazard reason you're using imperial, then the mead will be "dry" and not as sweet. It will not be ruined.... It will not taste bad.... You'll be fine. This is a rough recipie. :A more exact would be: :18 lbs Tupelo honey :21 Pints water <--US or imperial? :5 tsp yeast nutrient :1 pkg Red Star Champagne Yeast. :Total volume is ~ 5 gallons. :Enjoy, and please... have a mead... you seem to need one. ::Just cleaning up.... == The section "How to make mead #2" == I really don't think that this section belongs under this article. The process that is described is not really for making mead at all. All mead must contain at least a substantial base of the fermentables to be honey. The process of using "Citrons" may be for making a fermented alcoholic beverage, but it is not mead. I'm going to watch this article for a while and look for other articles in which to put the "citron" beverage, but if I hear no objections I would like to move or delete that portion of the article. The method that is descibed in the first section does give a general overview of making the beverage at home and does give a mead that is not too dry or sweet. I am going to edit the gallons designation to read "Gallons (U.S.) to avoid any confusion with the Imperial gallon. --User:Rimbaud 00:09, Jan 6, 2005 (UTC) :Thanks for doing the identification. I agree, the "citrons" (likely lemons rather than the English-language citron?) one should go, whether or not you find another home for it. User:Gene Nygaard 00:36, 6 Jan 2005 (UTC) :Agreed. It's nothing like beverages referred to as mead in English. It appears to have been added 04:26, 31 Aug 2004 by anonymous user 193.167.144.30, whose only other contribution was to the article on Glögg. -User:Benwbrum 23:04, 28 Jan 2005 (UTC) As there were no arguments in favor of keeping the strange lemon/sugar brew recipie, I moved it below. -User:Benwbrum 06:40, 3 Feb 2005 (UTC) ==How to make mead #2 == This method of making mead is commonly used in Finland. It is not based on honey, but citrons instead. Gather your equipment. You will need a closeable container (a big plastic bucket for example) and empty bottles, size depending on how much you are going to produce. You may want to sterilize all of your equipment like described in the previous recipe. Starter recipe: 5 liters of water. 0.5kg of brown sugar. 0.5kg of white sugar. 2 citrons. A small piece of yeast. Raisins. Boil 2 liters of water. Meanwhile, wash the citrons well and peel them into the container you will making your mead in. Add the sugars into the container with the peels. Pour the boiling water on top. Mix. Add 3 liters of cold water so that the mixture will be lukewarm. Add a very small piece of yeast and slice the citrons into the mix, carefully removing the white part. Let it stand overnight. When you are ready to bottle it, add one spoonful of sugar and a few raisins to the bottle before you pour the mead in. After bottling, let the bottles stand on a desk (room temperature) for a few more hours. Move the bottles to your refrigerator. The mead is ready, and should be served cold. == Mead recipe on the WikiCookbook == I have added the recipe of mead to wikibooks:Cookbook:Mead. I think that a perhaps this article should add a link to that page, rather than to contain a "how to make mead" itself. I feel that recipes are quite unencyclopedic. User:Salleman 19:21, 11 Jun 2005 (UTC)


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Words begining with Mead:

Mead
Mead
Mead,_Clark_County,_WI
Mead,_Clark_County,_Wisconsin
Mead,_CO
Mead,_Colorado
Mead,_NE
Mead,_Nebraska
Mead,_OK
Mead,_Oklahoma
Mead,_WI
Mead,_Wisconsin
Mead129
Meade
Meade
Meade,_Kansas
Meade,_KS
Meade,_MI
Meade,_Michigan
Meade-Waldo
Meades_Ranch
Meades_Ranch,_Kansas
Meades_Ranch,_KS
Meade_Alcorn
Meade_County
Meade_County,_Kansas
Meade_County,_Kansas
Meade_County,_Kansas
Meade_County,_Kentucky
Meade_County,_Kentucky
Meade_County,_Kentucky
Meade_County,_KS
Meade_County,_KY
Meade_County,_SD
Meade_County,_South_Dakota
Meade_County,_South_Dakota
Meade_County,_South_Dakota
Meade_Lewis
Meade_Lux_Lewis
Meade_Township
Meade_Township,_Huron,_MI
Meade_Township,_Huron,_Michigan
Meade_Township,_Huron_County,_MI
Meade_Township,_Huron_County,_Michigan
Meade_Township,_Mason,_MI
Meade_Township,_Mason,_Michigan
Meade_Township,_Mason_County,_MI
Meade_Township,_Mason_County,_Michigan
Meade_Township,_MI
Meade_Township,_Michigan
Meadle
Meadlowlark_Lemon
Meadow
Meadow's_Law
Meadow's_law
Meadow,_SD
Meadow,_South_Dakota
Meadow,_Texas
Meadow,_TX
Meadow,_UT
Meadow,_Utah
Meadow-grass
Meadow-grass
Meadow-rue
Meadowbank_railway_station,_Sydney
Meadowbank_Thistle_F.C.
Meadowbrook
Meadowbrook,_AL
Meadowbrook,_Alabama
Meadowbrook,_Alabama
Meadowbrook,_WI
Meadowbrook,_Wisconsin
Meadowbrook_Farm
Meadowbrook_Farm,_Kentucky
Meadowbrook_Farm,_KY
Meadowbrook_Parkway
Meadowcroft_Rock_Shelter
Meadowfield
Meadowhall
Meadowhall_railway_station
Meadowlakes
Meadowlakes,_Texas
Meadowlakes,_TX
Meadowlands
Meadowlands,_Minnesota
Meadowlands,_MN
Meadowlands,_South_Africa
Meadowlands_Environment_Center
Meadowlands_Museum
Meadowlands_Racetrack
Meadowlands_Sports_Complex
Meadowlands_Township,_Minnesota
Meadowlands_Township,_MN
Meadowlark
Meadowlark_Lemon
Meadowood
Meadowood,_PA
Meadowood,_Pennsylvania
Meadows
Meadows'_law
Meadowsweet
Meadowsweet
Meadows_Field_Airport
Meadows_Place,_Texas
Meadows_Place,_TX
Meadows_Township,_Minnesota
Meadows_Township,_MN
Meadowvale,_Ontario
Meadowvale_(GO_Station)
Meadowvale_(GO_Transit)
Meadowview
Meadowview_(Sacramento,_CA)
Meadowview_(Sacramento,_California)
Meadowview_Estates
Meadowview_Estates,_Kentucky
Meadowview_Estates,_KY
Meadow_Acres,_WY
Meadow_Acres,_Wyoming
Meadow_Bridge
Meadow_Bridge,_West_Virginia
Meadow_Bridge,_WV
Meadow_Brook
Meadow_Brook_Township,_Minnesota
Meadow_Brook_Township,_MN
Meadow_Brown
Meadow_Foxtail
Meadow_foxtail
Meadow_frog
Meadow_Glade
Meadow_Glade,_WA
Meadow_Glade,_Washington
Meadow_Grove
Meadow_Grove,_NE
Meadow_Grove,_Nebraska
Meadow_Heights
Meadow_Heights,_Victoria
Meadow_Lake,_New_Mexico
Meadow_Lake,_NM
Meadow_Lake,_Saskatchewan
Meadow_Lakes,_AK
Meadow_Lakes,_Alaska
Meadow_Lakes,_Alaska
Meadow_Lake_(electoral_district)
Meadow_Lake_(provincial_electoral_district)
Meadow_Lane
Meadow_Lark_Lake,_WY
Meadow_Lark_Lake,_Wyoming
Meadow_Lea
Meadow_mouse
Meadow_Party
Meadow_Pink
Meadow_Pipit
Meadow_pipit
Meadow_Rue
Meadow_Soprano
Meadow_Township,_Minnesota
Meadow_Township,_MN
Meadow_Vale
Meadow_Vale,_Kentucky
Meadow_Vale,_KY
Meadow_Valley,_CA
Meadow_Valley,_California
Meadow_Valley_Wash
Meadow_vetchling
Meadow_Vista
Meadow_Vista,_CA
Meadow_Vista,_California
Meadow_Vole
Meadow_vole
Meadow_Well_Riots
Meadow_Woods,_FL
Meadow_Woods,_Florida
Meadow’s_Law
MEADS
Meads
Meadsteve
Meads_of_Asphodel
Meadville
Meadville,_Mississippi
Meadville,_Missouri
Meadville,_MO
Meadville,_MS
Meadville,_PA
Meadville,_Pennsylvania
MeadWestvaco
MeadWestvaco
Mead_(disambiguation)
Mead_Township,_PA
Mead_Township,_Pennsylvania


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