Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (2024)

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This peach mead recipe is easy to make in small batches as the peaches ripen or the roses bloom. Mead is the ideal vehicle for saving summer’s bounty for winter in small batches. Mead is wine sweetened with honey instead of sugar. While you could make mead with only honey and yeast, adding fruit, berries, and herbs to mead recipes offers exciting and limitless possibilities. Chokecherry, dandelion, mint, rosebuds, elderflowers, and elderberries are transformed when fermented in a gallon jug with honey. Plus when you use medicinal herbs in a mead recipe the medicine is preserved along with the flavor.

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For this mead recipe, you’ll need fresh, ripe peaches, honey, elderflowers, and rosebuds. Orange juice or grape juice are added to feed the yeast.

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Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (2)

Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses

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  • Author: Joybilee Farm
  • Prep Time: 6 to 8 weeks
  • Cook Time: N/A
  • Total Time: 0 hours
  • Yield: 4 - 24 ounce bottles 1x
  • Category: Mead
  • Method: Fermentation

Description

The flavor of this mead recipe is delicate and sweet like summer blossoms and fruit.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 2 quarts of water
  • ½ quarts (1.9 L) water
  • 2 Tablespoons (30 ml) Elderflowers, stem removed (1/5 ounce, or 5.5 g)
  • 3 Tablespoons (45 ml) rose petals or buds (¼ ounce, or 7 g)
  • 4 cups chopped peaches
  • 3 cups of honey
  • 1 cup grape juice or orange juice
  • 1/3 package of champagne yeast

Instructions

  • Place elderflowers and rose petals in a 2 quart, heat proof bowl. Pour 4 cups of boiling water over them and cover. Let steep for 1 hour, covered. Strain the tea. Stir the honey into the warm tea. Set aside.
  • Meanwhile, remove the skin and pits from peaches and chop them into 1/2 inch pieces. Crush them lightly with a potato masher until the juices flow.
  • Sanitize a 1 gallon glass fermenting jug, along with its tin cap. Pour the herb and honey mixture into the fermenting jug. Add the peaches and all the peach juice.
  • Pour the orange juice or grape juice into a 2 cup measuring cup. Stir in 1 cup of water. Allow it to come to room temperature. Sprinkle the yeast over top of the juice. Wait 30 minutes. Stir the yeast into the grape juice and wait till it becomes frothy or bubbly.
  • Pour the juice – yeast mixture into the fermentation jug. Add the cooled honey-herb tea to the fermentation jug. Cap the jug tightly and shake it for a few minutes to finish dissolving both the yeast and the honey. Top up the jug to the shoulders with boiled and cooled filtered water.
  • Sanitize a wine fermentation lock. Fill the fermentation lock with boiled and cooled water. Replace the cap on the fermentation jug with the fermentation lock.
  • Place the jug on a plate to catch any overflow. Place the jug in a spot out of direct sunlight and away from any source of heat, for several days. The fermentation will become active with bubbling and frothing evident. After 5 days to a week, strain the mixture into a clean and sanitized fermentation jug. Discard the herbs and fruit. Cap the new jug with a clean and sanitized fermentation lock filled with cooled, boiled water. Set it aside to continue the fermentation.

Racking off

  • After 4 to 6 weeks you’ll notice that the fermentation has slowed down and sediment is forming in the bottom of the jug. The mead is still not clear though. When the bubbling and frothing stop, transfer the liquid to a fresh, sanitized fermentation jug, using a sanitized siphon hose. Sanitize the fermentation lock again and place it on the new fermentation jug. The fermentation process will resume.

Clear the mead

  • This last fermentation can take anywhere from 2 to 6 weeks. When the fermentation stops, the wine will clear. This phase needs patience. If it doesn’t clear naturally in 6 weeks add ¼ teaspoon of pectinase to the jug. Replace the fermentation lock and wait.

Bottle the mead

  • When the wine clears and fermentation stops, siphon the mead into sanitized wine bottles using a sanitized siphon hose. Be careful not to stir up any sediment that remains on the bottom of the jug. Cap with a wine corker or a twist cap according to your bottles. Label and date the bottles.

Aging the mead

  • This mead recipe will be more mellow and better tasting after aging for 6 months to a year. The flavors will mature and the coarse taste of young wine will be replaced with a smooth flavor. It’s worth the wait. I like to wait till at least December to taste my first bottles of summer mead. It is a nice way to remember the joy of summer, sipping summer mead by the fire with the snow falling outside.

Keywords: Mead, Fermentation, Peaches, Honey Wine, Mead Recipe

Recipe Card powered byEasy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (3)

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (4)

Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses

The flavor of this mead recipe is delicate and sweet like summer blossoms and fruit.

Yield: 4 – 750ml bottles (24 ounce)

Ingredients:

  • 2 quarts of water
  • ½ quarts (1.9 L) water
  • 2 Tablespoons (30 ml) Elderflowers, stem removed (1/5 ounce, or 5.5 g)
  • 3 Tablespoons (45 ml) rose petals or buds (¼ ounce, or 7 g)
  • 4 cups chopped peaches
  • 3 cups of honey
  • 1 cup grape juice or orange juice
  • 1/3 package of champagne yeast

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (5)

Directions:

Place elderflowers and rose petals in a 2 quart, heat proof bowl. Pour 4 cups of boiling water over them and cover. Let steep for 1 hour, covered. Strain the tea. Stir the honey into the warm tea. Set aside.

Meanwhile, remove the skin and pits from peaches and chop them into 1/2 inch pieces. Crush them lightly with a potato masher until the juices flow.

Sanitize a 1 gallon glass fermenting jug, along with its tin cap. Pour the herb and honey mixture into the fermenting jug. Add the peaches and all the peach juice.

Pour the orange juice or grape juice into a 2 cup measuring cup. Stir in 1 cup of water. Allow it to come to room temperature. Sprinkle the yeast over top of the juice. Wait 30 minutes. Stir the yeast into the grape juice and wait till it becomes frothy or bubbly.

Pour the juice – yeast mixture into the fermentation jug. Add the cooled honey-herb tea to the fermentation jug. Cap the jug tightly and shake it for a few minutes to finish dissolving both the yeast and the honey. Top up the jug to the shoulders with boiled and cooled filtered water.

Sanitize a wine fermentation lock. Fill the fermentation lock with boiled and cooled water. Replace the cap on the fermentation jug with the fermentation lock.

Place the jug on a plate to catch any overflow. Place the jug in a spot out of direct sunlight and away from any source of heat, for several days. The fermentation will become active with bubbling and frothing evident. After 5 days to a week, strain the mixture into a clean and sanitized fermentation jug. Discard the herbs and fruit. Cap the new jug with a clean and sanitized fermentation lock filled with cooled, boiled water. Set it aside to continue the fermentation.

Racking off

After 4 to 6 weeks you’ll notice that the fermentation has slowed down and sediment is forming in the bottom of the jug. The mead is still not clear though. When the bubbling and frothing stop, transfer the liquid to a fresh, sanitized fermentation jug, using a sanitized siphon hose. Sanitize the fermentation lock again and place it on the new fermentation jug. The fermentation process will resume.

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (6)

Clear the mead

This last fermentation can take anywhere from 2 to 6 weeks. When the fermentation stops, the wine will clear. This phase needs patience. If it doesn’t clear naturally in 6 weeks add ¼ teaspoon of pectinase to the jug. Replace the fermentation lock and wait.

Bottle the mead

When the wine clears and fermentation stops, siphon the mead into sanitized wine bottles using a sanitized siphon hose. Be careful not to stir up any sediment that remains on the bottom of the jug. Cap with a wine corker or a twist cap according to your bottles. Label and date the bottles.

Aging the mead

This mead recipe will be more mellow and better tasting after aging for 6 months to a year. The flavors will mature and the coarse taste of young wine will be replaced with a smooth flavor. It’s worth the wait. I like to wait till at least December to taste my first bottles of summer mead. It is a nice way to remember the joy of summer, sipping summer mead by the fire with the snow falling outside.

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (7)

Mead recipes to try

The ancient herbal craft of mead making marries well with the herbal craft of foraging. Many herbs, fruit, and berries can be preserved using honey mead. When you forage your mead ingredients from the wild you can make unique mead flavors that come from your local climate and terrain.

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (8)

Pascal Baudar in his book, The Wildcrafting Brewer, Creating Unique Drinks and Boozy Concoctions from Nature’s Ingredients (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2018) speaks of choosing a base flavor from the local forests or fields and then adding an aromatic flavor and some sweet fruit to create a mead that is local and seasonal.

If you were walking in my forest garden right now that mead might look like:

Fireweed with its tannins for the base flavor, rosebuds for the aromatic flavor and saskatoons, black currants, and wild blueberries for the sweet addition.

3 Tips on Mead Making from foraged plants

Pascal Baudar suggests using a combination of foraged plants that represent a specific terroir, the forest, mountain, or meadow you are foraging in. The combination will look something like 70% of base flavor plants, 10 percent aromatic or bitter flavor, and 20 percent sweet additions like berries and fruit. But there are no rules. In my peach recipe above, my main flavor is the peaches, with the elderflowers and roses offering both aromatic and bitter flavors.

Foraged mead can be made simply with fruit and herbs or it can be a more adventurous project using a wider category of foraged ingredients like roots, bark, leaves, and fungi, as well as fruit and flowers. While I used commercial yeast in my easy mead recipe above, you can also use wild yeast from fruits and berries. These will make mead with a lower alcohol percentage. As I said, there are no rules.

Pascal also suggests that when mixing a new, untested, mead recipe using foraged ingredients that you make only a small batch, about 1 1/2 quarts to test the flavor combination before committing to a larger batch.

I like to make mead in 1 gallon batches because the foraged ingredients are often in short supply — just 1 cup of huckleberries, 8 cups of dandelion flowers, or a handful of rosebuds might be ready at one time. By only making small batches I can take advantage of these small harvests without feeling overwhelmed and without a huge time commitment to the project. Once the mead is in the fermenting jug, I can leave it for months. I can bottle it when I’m ready, on my time.

Who is Pascal Baudar?

Pascal Baudar is the author of The New Wildcrafted Cuisine and The Wildcrafting Brewer. He is an expert forager and wild food enthusiast that explores the flavors and uses of wild edibles through food preservation, fermentation, and herbalism. For the past 17 years, he’s been experimenting, teaching classes near Los Angeles, and writing on his blog Urban Outdoor Skills.

Pascal Baudar is probably the most innovative forager, fermenter, and foodie that’s experimenting, cooking, teaching, and writing about foraging today. If you live in California you can attend his workshops in person. If you are like the rest of us pick upThe Wildcrafting Brewer and get to know this master forager better. This book is innovative, creative, and inspiring.

Acknowledgement: I received a review copy ofThe Wildcrafting Brewer from the publisher.

Easy Peach Mead Recipe with Summer Roses and Elderflowers (2024)

FAQs

How many peaches for 1 gallon mead? ›

1.5 lbs of peaches per gallon isn't a whole lot. So one of your options is to transfer the mead to another vessel and add more peaches. A bucket might work better than a carboy and using a BIAB bag to hold the fruit lets you get it out of there easier.

When to add peaches to mead? ›

Second method: (the two glass gallon jugs) I mix everything including the yeast, but not the fruit. We will allow these batches to build up an alcohol content and develop into a mead first. Then after 30 days we will rack it into a pail and add the fruit.

Can you use canned peaches for mead? ›

Unless the peaches are canned in 100% juice, you may get a “cider-y” flavor from the corn syrup that is typically used. Peach is such a subtle flavor, I'd go with adding a LITTLE flavor concentrate.

How to make potent mead? ›

The average mead recipe calls for 3 to 3.5 pounds of honey per gallon of finished mead, depending on the sugar content of the honey. This makes strong mead in the range of 14 percent alcohol. Since we don't boil or filter the mead, clarity usually comes between 9 and 12 months of maturation in French oak casks.

How many peaches do you need for 4 cups? ›

About 2 medium peaches = 1 cup sliced peaches. About 4 medium peaches = 1 cup pureed peach.

How long should I leave fruit in my mead? ›

Pour the fruit puree into the fermentation jar. Rack the mead from the carboy to the fermentation jar, taking care to leave as much lees as possible at the bottom of the carboy. Place the lid on the jar and refrigerate for 1 to 2 weeks.

What is the alcohol content of peach mead? ›

Meads are 12.5-13% abv.

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.

How do you know when mead is ready to drink? ›

How do I know when it's ready? After a few weeks, (depending on temperature) you should see the bubbling in the airlock slow down and begin to stop, once this has happened the yeast has converted all the sugar into alcohol, so your mead is almost ready.

What not to put in mead? ›

Preservatives will impede or prevent fermentation. Likewise with bottled juices or frozen fruit juice, look out for Potassium Sorbate, a preservative that will prevent fermentation. If using juice, use pure juice. Added sugar in commercial juices can add strange flavors.

Can you can mead in a Mason jar? ›

Yes you can bottle in mason jars. No you should not heat them as it will damage the delicate mead. It is probably not the best container as I don't think the lid provides the best seal without a vacuum in the container, however it will still work for shorter term storage. My personal preference is to use beer bottles.

Do you leave fruit in mead? ›

You also want to push the fruit down twice a day (called punching down the fruit cap) as you don't want the floating fruit to dry out or spoil. Remove the fruit bag after about 7–14 days, or rack the mead away from the fruit to a second fermenter. Leaving the fruit in too long can result in flavor and haze issues.

Should I add lemon juice to mead? ›

Some people add lemon or other citrus juices to mead as a source of acid to help balance out the sweet flavor of the honey, but this is by no means mandatory. Adding sugar or honey will not actually neutralize the acid or change the pH; it will only help to balance the flavor as David had mentioned.

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.

Why is my homemade mead bitter? ›

Chemical Chemicals in the mead above taste threshold levels, presence of undesirable chemical substances. Chemical, vitamin, nutrient flavors, possibly with bitterness or saltiness. Use less nutrient additions, check purity and cleanliness of water sources, check use of cleaning chemicals.

How much fruit should I add to a gallon 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.

How many peaches do I need for a gallon of juice? ›

If you are going to ferment with the pulp and skins let them get really soft to let the pectin break down, though it depends what pests are after your fruit. you would need somewhere between 8 and 15 pounds per gallon of juice, depending how well you press them.

How many peaches does it take to fill a pint jar? ›

*Most seem to be referencing the National Center for Home Food Preservation guide to canning peaches, which is geared towards a full 7 quart canner. This is a recipe for a single pint/500mL Mason jar, which will fit roughly 3 peaches (sliced) or 1–1.5 lbs. Scale up as needed depending on how many peaches you have.

How many gallons of water does it take to grow one peach? ›

The total minimum water requirement for mature peach trees is about 36 inches per year. Under normal conditions a mature peach tree requires about 35 - 40 gallons of water per day during July and August. 2. The edible portion of a ripe peach contains about 87% water.

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