Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (2024)

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Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe

Originally Published March 15, 2011. Updated 11/15/20

Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (1)

This Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe is a beautiful way to extend one of the best flavours of the season. Make some now, enjoy it next year!

This is the first mead that we ever made, and it turned out so amazing... everything else has pretty much paled in comparison. Definitely one of our top 3 favorite homemade wine recipes!

If you’ve read my Ravings of a Canadian Expat: Christmas Oranges post, you’ll know I’m pretty obsessed with anything resembling a Christmas orange.

So, I may be a little biased about where this recipe ranks among all of our wine recipes!

This recipe is HIGHLY seasonal. If clementines are in season, act fast if you’re looking to make a batch of it!

This mead starts out incredibly fragrant - almost like a delicious, fruity tea - but don't drink much of it before fermenting! The finished product is even better!

Another nice thing about this wine is that it is very good when fairly “young”, compared to many meads - At only 6 months old, this tasted amazing.

Age it if you like – we haven’t been able to keep any long enough to see how it ages. Our first 5 gallon batch was almost all gone LONG before the next Cuties season had started!

The ABV on this came out to about 8%, but - as you’ll learn as you read on - your mileage may vary!iv

Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (2)

What is Mead?

This post is one of the very first home brewing recipes we shared on the blog, and we’ve since posted a couple more, pretty recently - Homemade Blueberry Mead , How to Make Pumpkin Mead, Homemade Wildflower Mead ... so you may already know about mead 😉

Mead is basically a wine, but instead of being made from fruit, it’s made from honey. Technically, this recipe is a melomel - a mead that’s been fermented with the addition of fruit - but “mead” is a much better-known term.

How to Make Clementine Mead

If you haven't attempted making mead before, don't be intimidated! Check out our primer to home brewing:

- Wine Making At Home, Part 1: Why?

- Wine Making at Home, Part 2: Equipment to Get Started

- Wine Making at Home, Part 3: The Brewing Process.

- Wine Making at Home, Part 4: How to Stabilize and Back Sweeten Wine

Just a small handful of entries, and you'll be good to go!

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Clementine Mead Ingredients

This mead recipe requires only a few ingredients to make - super simple! Here is some information about those base ingredients that you may find helpful.

Spring Water

While using tap water can be an option, we opt to use jugs of spring water, for a couple of reasons..

First of all, life in Minneapolis opened our eyes to the fact that tap water doesn’t always taste good. While our water here in Hamilton always tastes fresh and clean (without a filter even!), we know that’s not the case for everyone. Bottled spring water won’t introduce any weird, undesirable flavours to your mead.

Additionally, there’s the convenience factor. Not only is it clean tasting, it’s pre-measured, sterile, and handy.

However, if your tap water is consistently tasty and safe, feel free to use that instead of bottled.

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The Honey

Type of Honey

When you’re using honey instead of sugar, you’re going to want to be careful in your choice of honey. Where white sugar is fairly neutral in flavour, honey can be aggressively flavoured.

I recommend picking something lightly coloured and lightly flavoured - a clover or orange blossom honey, for instance.

Something like a wildflower or buckwheat honey is likely to completely overwhelm the flavour from the orange peel.

Clementine Oranges

When we were in the USA, we would use peels from crates of "Cuties" oranges, which are only in season for a few months each year. Love them... I can snarf a crate by myself, in a sitting, if left to my own devices. Yum.

Now that we’re back home in Canada, we’ll use whatever brand of clementines are readily available - there tends to be more variety when it comes to Christmas type oranges here.

We’ll buy a crate or two of oranges and polish them off in a couple/few days. As we peel each, the peel goes into a plastic baggie, and into the fridge or freezer. Once we have enough, we make this Clementines Mead.

Other times, we'll just buy a crate or two, and make this from the oranges, rather than the peels.

If you're not the type to save up orange peels, feel free to just slice up your oranges and use them like that - peel and all. That's how I've written the recipe.

No clementine oranges available? Substitute other oranges! Blood oranges, satsumas, even just navel oranges work really well in this recipe.

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A few notes:

- If you're using really big oranges, you can halve the number of oranges you use.

- If you're using really pithy oranges, use a vegetable peeler to get just the outer, orange rind off. Including a lot of pith can make your mead a bit bitter.

Other Flavourings

While you can make this mead with just the orange as the flavouring, we like to add the other items to boost the flavour.

While you won't really be able to pick out the vinger, vanilla, rosemary, and spice in this - we wanted to keep it subtle - it DOES make for a more complex flavour than if you leave those items out.

Alcohol Content

Aside from flavour, there’s the matter of alcohol content.

Your mead’s final ABV will vary wildly dependent on a couple of main things: How much honey you use, and what kind of yeast you use (more on that in a bit)

Sugar - in this case, the sugars from the honey - is what feeds the yeast. Yeast eats up the sugars, and gives off alcohol as the byproduct of that process.

More honey = more food = more alcohol... to a point, anyway. About that...

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Yeast

The type of yeast you use will impact the alcohol content of the final product.

Yeast organisms don’t have an *unlimited* capacity to process sugar into alcohol. At some point, the environment they’re living in - the brewing mead - becomes too high in alcohol for the yeast to survive. They die off, the fermentation stops.

Different types of yeast have different tolerances for alcohol in the environment. That is, some yeast will be able to survive higher amounts of alcohol in the mead, so they’ll continue producing it longer than some other types.

Some types of yeast will bring you to something like an 8% ABV, while others will let things run wild until close to 20% ABV.

It’s good to know what you have in mind, when you choose your yeast.

Note: I’m going to refrain from using brand names in this section, as what’s available varies wildly between suppliers and regions! Ask your local homebrew supply shop for recommendations based on what you’re looking for.

If you want a sweet mead with a low-ish ABV - without having to back sweeten it (more on that in a bit) - choose a yeast with a lower tolerance for alcohol.

If you’re looking for a dry mead with a low ABV, choose a yeast with a lower tolerance for alcohol, and don’t use a ton of sugar.

If you want a sweet mead with a high ABV, use a bunch of sugar with a high-tolerance yeast... and be prepared to backsweeten it.

If you want a dry mead with a high ABV, use a fair amount of sugar and a high tolerance yeast.

We generally use a sweet mead yeast with this, and don’t end up needing to back sweeten it. Your mileage

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Making Larger Batches of Mead

As a note, you can easily scale this mead recipe up - in fact, there's a function inside the recipe card itself to do the math for you!

One note, though: You don't need to multiply the yeast, but the software doesn't know that. We will use one pouch of yeast for anything from 1-5x batches, and then 1 pouch for every 5x batches beyond that.

As a related note: The recipe software is definitely geared towards cooking, not wine making. Therefore, you can pretty much ignore all of the info it gives you: The nutritional info is calculated on everything that goes into the mead.

It does not take into account how much sugar will be fermented out, how much volume is lost to racking, etc.

Back Sweetening Your Homemade Clementine Mead

Sometimes - usually, even - you’ll find that the yeast went a bit too far with their smorgasbord, and you end up with a Clementine Mead that’s not as sweet as you’d like it.

... and that’s when you back sweeten it! You can read my How to Stabilize and Back Sweeten Wine post for information on how to back sweeten it.

Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (8)

How to Make Sparkling Clementine Mead

Clementine Mead is especially nice as a bubbly beverage - it tastes festive and celebratory! There are two main ways to accomplish this, both of which happen AFTER fermentation has ceased.

Note: Consult your local homebrew store for what your options are when it comes to bottling sparkling wine. As this ferments a bit in the bottle, normal wine bottles aren’t a good idea - they can explode from the extra pressure.

We’ll usually use beer bottle and caps for any sparkling wine or sparkling ciders that we make, but there are options more along the lines of champagne bottles. Selection and brands tend to vary wildly by location.

Anyway!

For Naturally Carbonated Sparkling Clementine Mead

In a small pot, mix together 1 cup of water with 1 cup of honey. Use a sanitized funnel to pour this into a sanitized large carboy.

Rack the mead over into this carboy, swirling it as you go.

Bottle the wine into appropriate bottles, following directions for whatever kind of cap/closure you will be using.

Allow mead to age at least a month or two – residual yeast will ferment the added sugar, carbonating the mead. Serve chilled.

For Force-Carbonated Sparkling Mead

Alternatively, you can rack the mead (without the added honey syrup!) into a keg and force carbonate it, if you have the set up for that - That’s what we tend to do with our ciders.

Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (9)

More Home Brewing Recipes!

While you've got your current homebrew fermenting away, why not consider putting a batch of something else on, to occupy your wait time? Here are a few of my other wine, cider, and mead recipes:

Wine Recipes

Banana Wine Recipe
Blackberry Wine Recipe
Blackcurrant Wine Recipe
Blueberry Wine Recipe
Cherry Wine Recipe
Cranberry Clementine Christmas Wine Recipe
Cranberry Wine Recipe
Faux Lingonberry Wine
Lychee Wine Recipe
Mango Strawberry Wine Recipe
Mango Wine Recipe
Mint Wine Recipe
Lychee Wine Recipe
Partridgeberry Wine Recipe
Passionfruit Wine Recipe
Peach Wine Recipe
Stone Fruit Wine Recipe
Strawberry Wine Recipe
Ube Wine Recipe
Watermelon Wine Recipe

Mead Recipes

Black Cherry Mead Recipe
Blueberry-Clementine Mead Recipe
Blueberry Mead Recipe
Pumpkin Mead Recipe
Wildflower Mead Recipe

Cider & Miscellaneous Homebrew Recipes

Hard Apple Cider Recipe
Home Brew Hard Iced Tea Recipe
Maple Hard Apple Cider Recipe

Share the Love!

Before you drink up, be sure to take some pics of your handiwork! If you Instagram it, be sure to tag me - @CelebrationGenerationCA - or post it to My Facebook Page - so I can cheer you on!

Also, be sure to subscribe to my free monthly email newsletter, so you never miss out on any of my nonsense.

Well, the published nonsense, anyway!

Anyway, on to that Clementine Mead Recipe!

Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (10)

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5 from 7 votes

Homemade Clementine Mead

This Homemade Clementines Mead Recipe is a beautiful way to extend one of my favourite flavours of the season. Make some now, enjoy it next year!

Prep Time2 hours hrs

Cook Time45 minutes mins

Resting time365 days d

Total Time365 days d 2 hours hrs 45 minutes mins

Course: Beverage

Cuisine: British, French

Servings: 5 gallons

Calories: 4152kcal

Author: Marie Porter

Equipment

  • 7.5 gallon pot (or bigger)

  • 1 6.5 gallon fermenter bucket and lid

  • 1 or 2 6.5 gallon glass carboys

  • 1 air lock and stopper

  • Siphon, siphon tubing.

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Heat 3 gallons of the water to a simmer. Add honey, stir until dissolved.

  • Add ginger, vanilla beans (scraping seeds into the mixture before adding the pods), peels, juice, rosemary, and spices. Bring mixture back up to a simmer and keep it there – just simmering, not boiling – for about 45 minutes.

  • Strain mixture into a sanitized bucket, removing herbs, spices, and fruit. Cover bucket with sanitized lid, allow to cool to room temperature.

  • Using a sanitized funnel, transfer cooled mixture to a sanitized 5 gallon carboy, topping up with remaining water until carboy is almost full. Swirl to combine.

  • Using sanitized equipment, take a gravity reading. It should be in around the 1.088 area. Keep track of the number!

  • Sprinkle yeast into carboy, cover with sanitized air lock. Let sit, undisturbed, overnight.

  • Within 24 hours, you should notice fermentation activity – bubbles in the airlock, carbonation and /or swirling in the wine must. This means you’re good to go! Put the carboy somewhere cool (not cold!), and leave it alone for a month.

  • Using sanitized equipment, rack the clarified wine off the sediment, into a clean, freshly sanitized 5 gallon carboy. Cap with sanitized airlock, leave it alone for another 2-3 months.

  • Repeat racking process. Leave wine alone for a month or two. By 6 months in, your mead should be very clear, and VERY tasty!

  • Using sanitized equipment, take a gravity reading, then rack the mead into clean, sanitized bottles. Cork. (We like to use these for corking our homemade wine. Easy to use – no special equipment needed! – easy to uncork, and – should you have any wine left in your bottle after serving (pfft!), the “cork” is easily replaced for temporary storage!)

Notes

IMPORTANT:

Software generates nutritional information based on the ingredients as they start, and is unable to account for the sugars consumed in the fermentation process. As such, the calories, sugars, and carbs are shown WAY higher than reality.

Additionally, the listed value is for the entire recipe, NOT per serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 4152kcal | Carbohydrates: 1124g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 208mg | Potassium: 755mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 1118g | Vitamin C: 7mg | Calcium: 172mg | Iron: 6mg

Related posts:

Mango WineMint WineFaux Lingonberry WinePeach Wine
Homemade Clementine Mead Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How many oranges to put in mead? ›

Ingredients: 1 gallon batch. 3 ½ lbs Clover or your choice honey or blend (will finish sweet) 1 Large orange (later cut in eights or smaller, rind and all)

What is the best water to honey ratio for mead? ›

The ratio of water to honey depends on the type of mead you want to make. For a dry mead, the ratio is 4 parts water to 1 part honey; a sweet mead is 2 to 1. Kluz likes his mead sweet, so he typically uses 1 3/4 gallons of honey and tops it off with 3 1/4 gallons of water.

What is the strongest mead you can make? ›

18% is generally regarded as the upper limit for mead fermentations, as even the strongest wine yeasts struggle after this much alcohol is present.

How long should I let mead ferment? ›

Put your mead in a warm, dark place. Your mead will start to ferment within 24 to 48 hours, and will continue doing so for about a week (sometimes longer). You'll know it's done when the bubbling has slowed down significantly (fermentation creates carbon dioxide, which causes bubbling in the airlock).

How much fruit do I need for 5 gallons of mead? ›

There really isn't a rule of thumb saying, “Add 3 lbs of every type of fruit to get a light flavor and 6 lbs of any fruit to get heavier flavor”. Different fruit gives different amounts of flavor. That is why this is so helpful. All of these additions would take place in Secondary and all are for 5 gallons of mead.

How many pounds of fruit do I need for 5 gallons of mead? ›

A good starting point with most fruits is about 3 pounds of fruit per gallon of mead, though I have been known to use 5 or even 6 pounds of fruit. Fruit blends can produce some great-tasting meads.

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.

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.

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.)

Does aging mead make it better? ›

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 happens if you put too much yeast in mead? ›

In general, more yeast is actually better, at least at first. But you can, if you severely over-pitch, end up dosing your must with so many ravenously hungry yeast cells that they over compete for the sugar and nutrients, resulting in stressed yeast and resulting production of off flavors.

Why does my mead taste like rocket fuel? ›

“Kerosene” and “rocket fuel” are descriptors often used for meads that had unhappy yeast fermenting the sugars. Not all yeasts produce tasty flavors either. In these wild environments, different bacterial strains likely imparted additional interesting flavors.

Should I stir my mead while fermenting? ›

It is important to stir the 'must' during the primary fermentation. The yeast requires a good supply of oxygen during this 'aerobic' fermentation, meaning with air. It also helps keep the fruit in solution if you are fermenting on the fruit, grapes, or whatever kind of fruit. You don't want a solid cap forming on top.

Does mead need to be in the dark? ›

Store mead just as you would store wine: bottles on the side, in a cool, dark area. A wine cellar is perfect, but a kitchen pantry or cupboard works as well. Avoid any areas that have direct sunlight or heat.

How long should mead age before drinking? ›

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 many oranges do I need for a glass of juice? ›

There are 4 to 5 tablespoons or 1/4 to 1/3 cups of juice in one orange. To make one cup of fresh orange juice, you need three oranges. It's important to note this amount is for common oranges. Different varieties of orange, such as Valencia, navel, mandarin, or blood oranges will produce different quantities of juice.

How many oranges do you need for OJ? ›

Figuring out how many oranges go into an 8-ounce cup isn't quite so nebulous, but it's still not an exact science – the general rule of thumb is that three, medium-sized oranges equals eight ounces of juice.

How many oranges does it take to make a jug of juice? ›

If you're looking to make a gallon (about 16 glasses) of. grape juice, you'll need 14 pounds of grapes. You'll need about 85 to 90 pounds of fresh grapes to.

How many navel oranges make a gallon of juice? ›

It depends on the size, variety, and juiciness of the orange, but orange juice packager Tropicana puts the number at 36 oranges per gallon of juice. Citrus America, a company that makes juicing equipment for supermarkets and restaurants puts the number at 48 oranges per gallon.

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