50+ Mead Recipes for Homemade Honey Wine (2024)

Mead recipes can be hard to come by in this modern era, even though honey wine is one of the oldest beverages brewed by ancient peoples around the world. Still, dedicated homebrewers, historical reenactors, and even archeologists are recreating modern recipes for one of the world’s oldest craft beverages.

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Our own homemade mead recipes. Clockwise from top left: Chamomile Mead, Rose Mead (Rhodomel), Grape Mead (Pyment), Herbal Lemon Balm Mead.

Making mead at home is both incredibly simple, and immensely satisfying. With just a few simple ingredients and minimal equipment, you can craft a truly exceptional honey wine. People have been making mead for millennia, in small homestead kitchens, long before modern breweries and vineyards took up most of the production.

I made my first mead recipes in college, with minimal equipment in my tiny dorm room. Since then I’ve made literally hundreds of gallons, much to the delight of my friends and family.

Thousands of years ago humans were brewing mead in wooden troughs, filtering the brew through juniper branches and bottling it in cured animal hides. Even without modern yeast strains, stainless steel brew kettles, and running water, they were able to make high-quality honey wine, worthy of praise in epic poetry and Viking sagas.

Really, all you need is honey, water, and a bit of patience.

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A 10-year-old bottle of Chamomile mead, made in 2011 and opened in the summer of 2021. They only get better with age…

What Is Mead?

The term “mead” refers to any alcoholic beverage made with honey, and they often include other ingredients such as fruit, flowers, grains, and malt.

The honey gives the finished beverage an incredible body, and the distinctive flavor of honey comes through in the final drink. Since each jar of honey is as unique as the flowers it came from, mead can range from light and floral when made with clover honey, to deep and resinous when made with darker types of honey.

Mead is often associated with the Vikings and other Nordic peoples, but honey wines have been made all over the world for thousands of years.

Some of the earliest evidence in the archeological record actually comes from China, dating back to more than 10,000 years ago, where traces of honey wine were found in drinking cups in burial chambers. (The book Ancient Brews: Rediscovered and Re-Created has a fascinating account of this particular find, including a recipe re-created based on the traces found on the cup!)

Though there’s little hard evidence further back, most archeologists believe mead was first made 20,000 to 40,000 years ago when ancient peoples mixed honey with water and it spontaneously fermented. Modern T’ej (Ethiopian Honey Wine) is still made in Africa with traditional recipes, though I imagine it’s quite different than brews from 40,000 years ago, but who knows?

Most of the traditional names for various styles of mead are actually in Latin, dating back to the Roman era when the first records of various types of fermented beverages were written.

Just about anywhere that had access to honey has traditional mead recipes, traditional recipes survive from Ethiopia to Scandinavia, and from the Celts in the British Isles all the way to Ancient China.

Types of Mead

The generic term “mead” can refer to any honey wine, but just as with grape wine you’ll find Chardonnay and Zinfandel, there are finer distinctions among types of mead based on the ingredients.

In general, mead is classified in two ways, by strength, and by ingredients.

  • Short Mead or Quick Mead is a very light, carbonated mead that’s almost more like a very lightly alcoholic soda. It’s made with a very short fermentation time, usually around 1 to 3 weeks, and it’s consumed fresh. Sima or Finnish Fermented Lemonade is a good example of a quick mead.
  • Hydromels or Session Meads are light, low alcohol meads that are usually around 3% to 8% alcohol. They’re popular in France and Spain, and they’re sometimes just stronger mead diluted down at serving time.
  • Standard Mead is usually somewhere in the 8% to 14% alcohol range, and it’s made with wine yeast that has a low alcohol tolerance (so they die out early, leaving residual sugar and not too much alcohol).
  • Sack Meads or Great Meads have the highest alcohol content, anywhere from 14% to 20%, and often a good bit of residual sugar to balance out the flavors. These were celebration meads made for special occasions or royalty, and are the most expensive to produce.
  • Fortified Meads can be up to 60% alcohol because they’re first fermented and then fortified with distilled alcohol such as brandy. They’re basically the mead equivalent of port or other fortified wines.
  • Sparkling Mead is a mead that’s bottled bubbly, so it’s sparkling rather than still. It can be any strength, but it’s bottled with residual sugar and living yeast, so it continues fermenting in the bottle to produce carbonation.

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Persimmon Mead from one of our earliest batches. This one’s a “sack mead” or “great mead” with high alcohol content. It’s balanced by the natural tannins and warm fruity flavors in the persimmon and has a lot of residual sugars. I think it’d make a spectacular fortified mead too.

Beyond strength, meads are also categorized by their ingredients. Most of these names come from the Roman era and have Latin roots because they had a lot of fine distinctions in their specific honey wine recipes.

There are generic names, like melomel which includes any type of mead made with fruit, and then there are even more specific names for individual types of fruit meads. For example, pyment is a mead flavored with grapes. It’s also technically under the larger umbrella of “melomel” since it’s a fruit mead.

  • Melomel ~ Fruit Meads
    • Black Mead ~ A dark, rich mead flavored with black currants.
    • Cyser ~ Made with apple juice or cider, this is a mix between hard cider and mead.
    • Dragon’s Blood (or Viking Blood) ~ A deep red mead made with sweet red fruits, usually cherries.
    • Morat ~ Mead with mulberries.
    • Pyment ~ Mead made with grapes for flavoring, but most of the fermentable sugar is honey.
  • Metheglin ~ Floral, Herbal, and Spice Meads
    • Capsicumel ~ Spicy mead made with hot peppers.
    • Rhodomel ~ Rose mead flavored with either rose blossoms or rose hips.
  • Carmelized, Malted or Lactose Meads
    • Bochet ~ Mead made with caramelized honey.
    • Bochetomel ~ A caramelized honey mead that also incorporates fruit, usually dark fruit like blackberries or elderberries.
    • Braggot ~ Using malt and hops, as well as honey, it’s a mix between beer and mead.
    • Lactomel ~ A type of mead with added lactose (milk sugar) to give it a creamy mouthfeel.
  • Tree-Based Meads (with Sap, Syrup, Bark or Wood)
    • Acerglyn ~ A modern type of mead made with maple syrup or maple sap.
    • Betulaglyn ~ Mead made with birch syrup, sap, or leaves/twigs.
    • Wood-Aged Meads ~ Mead either aged in oak barrels, or with toasted wood chips added during fermentation.

Some people also mistakenly call “oxymels” mead, though they’re a mixture of honey, herbs, and vinegar that’s taken medicinally herbal medicine preparation. It’s not fermented with yeast, and really it’s not even a beverage. It’s more of syrup that’s taken by the spoonful, with honey added to help the medicine go down, though it does date back to ancient times as well.

Mead Recipes

The basic process for making mead is the same regardless of the type of mead you choose. If you’re a beginner, I’ve written a guide that explains in detail how to make mead, and it covers the sugar ratios and process for making a basic mead.

In a nutshell, the process is as follows:

  • Mix honey and water, stir to dissolve. Usually, it’s around 1 part honey to 3 parts water (by volume), but ratios vary widely based on the recipe.
  • Add Yeast
  • Pour into a fermentation vessel and cap with an airlock to prevent contamination
  • Wait about 2 weeks for primary fermentation
  • Once fermentation slows, siphon the mead into a clean container and seal with an airlock again.
  • Continue fermentation in secondary for several weeks, to several months, or even several years based on the recipe
  • Bottle the mead
  • Age at least a few weeks, months, or even years.
  • Enjoy!

If you’d really like to dive into home mead making, I’d suggest any of the following books. All are great beginner guides:

  • The Compleat Meadmaker by Ken Schramm ~ The definitive guide to making homemade mead using modern methods.
  • Make Mead Like a Viking by Jereme Zimmerman ~ Techniques for brewing traditional meads with minimal equipment and no additives, as they were brewed thousands of years ago.
  • Artisanal Small Batch Brewing by Amber Shehan ~ The definitive guide to making small batch (one gallon) mead, wine, and beer at home. She uses simple techniques and minimal equipment with spectacular results.

Melomel Recipes (Fruit Meads)

Fruit meads use fruit or fruit juice for flavoring, but most of the fermentable sugars come from honey. Most fruit, with the exception of wine grapes, doesn’t actually contain enough fermentable sugar to make wine on it’s own. When you’re making fruit wines, you need to add quite a bit of additional white sugar (usually 2 to 2 1/2 lbs per gallon) on top of the fruit juice.

Fruit meads aren’t all that different. They still require around 2 to 2 1/2 pounds of honey per gallon for successful fermentation. When made with honey, fruit meads are a lot more complex than white sugar-based wines, and they have incredible body.

I always prefer drinking fruit mead to fruit wine, though as you might imagine it’s a lot cheaper to make wine with sugar than it is to make mead with high-quality honey.

If you’re particularly interested in making melomels, I’d suggest investing in the book Let There Be Melomels: Fruit Meads to Inspire Your Imagination, which contains fruit mead recipes for almost every type of fruit.

Black Mead

Made with blackcurrants that give it a distinctive deep purple, almost black color, blackcurrant mead has a natural balance of acidity and tannins.

All parts of the black currant plant contain low levels of tannins, somewhat like grape skins, and blackcurrant leaves (or grape leaves) are often added to mead recipes as a natural tannin source. The fruit also contains enough tannins to balance the mead, along with an incredible deep berry flavor.

We grow blackcurrants and harvest them in bucketloads each year. We never fail to make blackcurrant mead. Lacking backyard bushes, you can also buy blackcurrant juice for mead-making.

  • Blackcurrant Mead Recipe (Black Mead)

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Blackcurrant Mead

Cyser

I usually make cyser by substituting honey in place of sugar in my apple wine recipe, and it ends up sweet and strong, with enough tannin to balance the finished drink.

You can also try these specific cyser recipes made with apple juice or cider, and with or without spices.

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Dragon’s Blood Mead (or Viking Blod Mead)

Somewhat of a modern novelty, dragon’s blood mead is named for its deep red color (as black mead is named for its color from black currants). It’s also sometimes called “Viking Blood” or “Viking Blod” mead.

Recipes vary, but dragon’s blood mead is often made with cherries or a mix of berries like raspberry and blackberry. I’ve even seen a recipe for dragonfruit mead called “dragon’s blood,” so clearly there’s some room for interpretation here.

I think mostly the name comes from a desire to have really epic labels on your wine bottles, so use your imagination.

I also found a video recipe for Viking blood mead (cherry melomel).

Morat

While they were often grown and harvested historically, mulberries just aren’t all that common anymore. We’ve foraged wild mulberries, and while they’re delicious, it can be hard to harvest enough before the birds strip the trees.

Historically this prolific fruit was plentiful, which is why mead made with mulberries gets its own specific name.

There aren’t a lot of morat recipes available online, but I did find this lovely video recipe for morat:

Pyment

Back in the day, there was less of a distinction between different types of fermented beverages. Often they were throwing in anything fermentable, and most archeological sites have residues in vessels that contain a mix of grapes, honey, fruit, and grain malt. So it was part wine, part beer, and part mead.

A mixture of grapes and honey was quite common, as it had great flavor, and you could still make a fine drink even if your grapes weren’t quite sweet enough to ferment into wine on their own.

Generally, pyment recipes include only a small amount of grape juice, and then the balance of the liquid is made up with water. That keeps the pyment from tasting too much like straight wine, and also makes sure that most of the fermentable sugars are coming from honey.

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Our own homemade pyment (grape mead) was made with homegrown wine grapes.

Other Fruit Meads

Beyond the specifically named fruit meads described above, you can actually make mead with just about any fruit. It can be tricky to get the right acid balance, and sometimes it’s hard to know how much honey to add to get your target alcohol level (while still having enough residual sugar).

I sometimes just use my own fruit wine recipes, like this peach wine recipe or blackberry wine recipe, and substitute honey in place of sugar. Made with honey they have more body and a more complex, refined taste.

These fruit mead recipes are tested and well-balanced and are a good place to start if you hope to branch out and develop your own recipe.

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Rhubarb mead

Metheglin Recipes (Floral, Herbal, and Spice Meads)

When made with herbs, spices, or flowers meads are referred to as Metheglin. Historically, these meads were often considered medicinal, and even common kitchen spices like cinnamon, cloves, and allspice were added specifically for medicinal value.

You can find literally dozens of recipes in the book Sacred Herbal Healing Beers: The Secrets of Ancient Fermentation.

I’d also recommend The Craft of Herbal Fermentation Course from the Herbal Academy, which not only teaches you how to make basic wine, beer and mead, it also covers how to incorporate herbs into your recipes for both flavor and medicinal value.

There are two specific types of mead within the “metheglin” heading that have their own names, a mead with chili peppers and another made with roses. Beyond that, all other herbal, spice, and floral meads are just generically called metheglin.

Capsicumel

The first time I encountered chili meads was at Pennsic, a two-week-long camping event for medieval reenactors in the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA). It seemed like a weird novelty that somebody thought up in their basem*nt, but it was unbelievably popular.

Not only did just about every brewer in every camp have their own version (which can’t be said about herbal meads or any other type but plain mead), but they were always incredibly popular with the drinkers who just couldn’t get enough of the sweet-spicy brew.

It turns out, adding a little heat to your mead actually works really well!

Rhodomel

Any mead made with roses or rose petals is referred to as a rhodomel, and these were popular with the ancient Romans.

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Rose petal wine (front) and Rose Petal Mead (back)

Other Herbal and Spiced Meads

Really most herbs and spices can be used to make mead, but it’s hard to add just the right amount. Some spices, like cinnamon and clove, can be bitter and overwhelming you use too much.

Other herbs, like chamomile, are so delicate that they’ll go unnoticed unless you use quite a bit.

These tested recipes for spiced and herbal meads are a good place to start for beginners.

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A gallon jug of lemon balm mead (honey wine) displayed out in our garden’s lemon balm patch.

Lactomel (Milk Mead)

Lactomel is a rather specific “milk mead” that’s in some ways like a milk stout (beer). Lactose is a “non-fermentable” sugar meaning that it’ll add sweetness and body, but won’t ferment. It’ll still be present in the finished beer as lactose.

The result is a thick, sweet mouthfeel somewhat reminiscent of a milkshake (but not quite).

Bochet (Carmelized Mead)

Bouchet and braggot are two different types of meads that incorporate special fermentable sugars into the recipe.

In the case of Bochet, the honey is first caramelized over a hot fire (but not burned) which creates deep caramel flavor notes in the finished mead. Atlas Obscura wrote about how tricky it is to make, mostly because the honey is superheated and can overflow and cause serious burns.

Once the honey is caramelized, other flavors can be added too. Fruit flavors are reasonably common with bochet, because fruit and caramel go so well together (thing apples, peaches, or even bananas).

Braggot (Malted Mead)

Braggot is a bit different, and it’s made with a mixture of honey and malt. While pyment is the love child of wine and mead, this is a similar mixture of beer and mead. Hops are often added too, but historically, braggot would have been made with brewing herbs like yarrow or other similar herbs.

(We consider those to be “gruit” or herbal beer these days, or beer without hops, but back in the day hops were less common than other herbs in beer.)

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Gruit Herbal Beer becomes braggot if made with both honey and malt.

Tree-Based Meads (Sap, Syrup and Oaked Meads)

Sometimes made with just syrup, and it’s questionable as to whether or not that’s actually “mead” since it often doesn’t contain honey. Sometimes, tree sap or syrup is used for flavoring and the main fermentable sugar is honey.

We make maple syrup, and also tap birch trees for syrup, so we’ve made a number of sap-based meads. Either using the syrup as in this birch syrup beer, or just substituting the sap for water and then adding honey to make mead.

Adding toasted wood chips to a mead during secondary is also a great way to add flavor, and it’s reminiscent of the old oaked meads of history (without the expense of buying an oak cask).

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Spiced Maple Mead. Image courtesy of Grow Forage Cook Ferment

Fortified Meads

Any mead can be made into a fortified mead, and all you really need to do is “fortify” the brew at bottling with a spirit. It’s similar to port, which is a wine with brandy added.

You can add any spirit, and I’d suggest choosing one that compliments the other flavors in the mead. Though brandy is the most common, you can also use whisky, gin, or anything else.

Homemade Fermented Beverages

Once you have the equipment for making mead, you’re all set up for making a number of other tasty beverages (alcoholic or not).

  • How to Make Hard Cider
  • How to Make Pear Cider (Perry)
  • How to Make Small Batch Wine
  • How to Make Homemade Beer
  • How to Make Water Kefir (non-alcoholic)

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Related

50+ Mead Recipes for Homemade Honey Wine (2024)

FAQs

What is the ratio of mead to honey? ›

How Much Honey Should I Use? In this recipe, you can choose exactly how sweet you'd like your wine to be. We'll go over it in further detail later, but we recommend using between two and three pounds of honey per gallon of mead — 2 pounds if you want it on the dryer side, and 3 pounds if you'd like it to be sweeter.

What's the difference between honey mead and honey wine? ›

Usually, mead contains a minor amount of alcohol. It is the oldest alcoholic drink fermented with honey, yeast, and water. On the other hand, honey wine is described as mead when it is fermented to a specific alcoholic strength. This is known only after you consider the tastes of these beverages.

What happens if I add too much honey to mead? ›

If you put in a bunch of honey and you get enough yeast (the right kind of yeast where it ferments all the way out) then you'll have a really dry, high alcohol champagne-like mead. You can use less honey to make a lower alcohol mead. Using less honey might make it a little bit more dry, though not necessarily.

How long to age mead before drinking it? ›

Mead should ideally age between six months to three years of aging before its ready to drink, depending on the mead. Just as with wine, lighter meads tend to be ready sooner; heavier, darker meads take longer.

How much mead will 5lbs of honey make? ›

The short answer is that for every gallon of mead that one wishes to be made, you would need anywhere from a pound and a half to five pounds of honey, then enough water to make a combined gallon. This is the 'yes' part to question above.

How much mead will 1 lb of honey make? ›

The ratio ranges from 1 lb. honey per gallon of water for a very light "soft-drink" to 5 lbs. per gallon for a sweet dessert wine. The less honey, the lighter the mead, and the quicker it can be made.

Does honey mead get better with age? ›

Maturing mead over time enables desirable flavors to meld and evolve, allowing harsh flavors to diminish. The Mead maker can age before bottling in carboys, barrels, or bottles. Consumers may age in the bottle. Commercially made meads are generally ready to be enjoyed when released.

What type of honey makes the best mead? ›

So, out of the 300 types, what is the best honey for mead? Meaderies, whether commercial or homebased, agree that honey harvested locally is the best kind. As for a specific kind of honey, orange blossom came out as a highly popular one because of its consistent flavor as well as citrusy taste.

Is dark or light honey better for mead? ›

Lighter colored honey like clover or orange blossom honey are milder in flavor than darker varieties, making them ideal for lighter styles of mead such as melomels or pyments. They also don't overpower other flavors you might add to your mead such as fruit or spices.

Should I boil my honey for mead? ›

(Some recipes call for boiling the honey, which makes for a cleaner, quicker ferment. However, many of the aromatic oils that are characteristic of the different flower honeys are boiled off as well in this process. Either method will make you mead.)

How much honey do I need for a 5 gallon batch of mead? ›

A typical mead batch consists of 15 pounds of honey for a 5 gallon mead batch. In this example, you have 3 pounds of honey per gallon of must, so your potential alcohol by volume is about 15%.

Should I back sweeten my mead? ›

Backsweetening is a process commonly used in mead and cider making to sweeten the finish of a fermented drink just before packaging. This is a useful technique to have in your arsenal of tricks since it is very common for meads and ciders to ferment out bone-dry, especially if they are intended to be lower in alcohol.

How long to leave oak chips in mead? ›

For chips, a tenth of an ounce per gallon for about a week is sufficient. A quarter ounce per gallon is probably a good place to start for cubes for about a two to four months. Other shapes include spirals of roughly 8” for one to two months, staves also 8” for two to three months, and honeycombs about 5” for a month.

Can you drink mead right after fermentation? ›

Yes, you can drink it as soon as it is clear, or you can drink it at nine months and have a fine wine. Or, you can wait 12-18 months and have an excellent mead.

Can you drink 20 year old mead? ›

However, be sure to save some bottles for future age sampling! I have a few 20+ year old meads that are still good; one is OK and not getting better, 1 is really good and still improving, and 1 bottle left of a 3rd that was so good the last time I tried that I don't know when I will open it.

Why does no one drink mead anymore? ›

Why did it fall out of favor? There were some new tax laws, as well as an increased availability of West Indian sugar in the 17th century that made honey harder and less necessary to obtain. But it was also the rise of other alcohols—namely beer and wine—that really did it in.

How much honey to add to a mead calculator? ›

Sweet Mead 16-23%: Half honey, half water. Semi-Sweet Mead 12-16%: One third honey, two thirds water. Dry Mead 10-13%: One quarter honey, three quarters water.

How much honey do I need to carbonate 1 gallon of mead? ›

In order to achieve approximately 6.5% ABV from a dry ferment I have been using 1.4 pounds of honey to each gallon (~170 g of honey per L) of initial volume. Add some hot tap water (just enough to get the honey liquefied after mixing) and mix up the ingredients.

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