INGREDIENTS
  • 1 gal water
  • 3 lbs Wildflower Honey (4 cups)
  • 1 tsp Yeast Nutrient
  • 1 g Red Star Cote des Blancs
  • 1 cup golden raisins (golden raisins will better keep the yellow color of the mead)
  • 1.5 pints dandelion petals
  • 1 medium-sized orange
 
DIRECTIONS
  • Collect 3 quarts of Dandelion flower heads in full bloom. Rinse any debris off the flower heads.
  • Separate the flower petals from the base of the blossoms. Remove as much green flower parts as possible from the petals. These add significant bitterness to the tea.
  • In a medium pot, boil 1 gal of water. Add one quart to a mason jar with the petals, and put in the refrigerator to steep for 1 day.
  • Remove the rest of the water from heat, wait until the bubbles stop, add honey. Stir until the honey is fully dissolved.
  • Add the must, raisins, and yeast nutrient to a sanitized 2 gallon primary fermenter.
  • Seal fermentor with airlock and store for a day, until the must cools to about 70 degrees.
  • After a day of steeping, strain petals from the dandelion tea and add to fermentor.
  • Add the juice and zest of one orange.
  • Aerate the liquid in the fermentor, and add the rehydrated yeast.
  • Put the fermentor in a dark place at a temperature of around 70 degrees.
  • After 2 weeks, with a siphon, re-rack the mead into a sanitized 1 gallon carboy.
  • After 4 weeks, re-rack, then let age for 6 months.
  • Fill sanitized bottles and let age for at least 5 more months.
  • Drink with friends after the last snow melts to celebrate the beginning of spring!