Patrick Nottingham always wanted a
winery, brewery or meadery included in his retirement plans. The
self-proclaimed “beverage nerd” still has a ways to go before
retirement, but his meadery, Nottingham Nectar, is already up and
running in Madison, WI.
For those unfamiliar, mead is alcohol
made from fermented honey, instead of hops or grapes. Wisconsin happens
to be renowned for its wild prairie honey, which Nottingham says has a
distinct light color and flowery notes.
Mead is essentially just water and
honey, but based on what you add to the mead, the type of honey and when
the honey is fermented, there are all kinds of different styles.
Nottingham Nectar creates a sparkling session style, which basically
just means the drink is slightly carbonated. All Nottingham’s meads are
naturally gluten free as well.
The Madison-based meadery has been
around since 2016 as Colony Nectar Co., but went through a rebrand
during COVID-19 as the former owner transitioned out, and Nottingham
transitioned in. All four Nottingham Nectar meads are Colony Nectar Co.
recipes, but with new branding.
Each of Nottingham Nectar’s meads are uniquely branded. Nottingham Nectar has four different meads available. Hexes & Hijinx is made from Door County cherries, so it is sweet and tart. Bonfires & Battlecries is made for fans of pilsner and lager beers, but with a light, crisp finish reminiscent of a cider. Folklores & Fairytales is similar to Bonfires and Battlecries, but with a sweeter finish, almost like a sparkling white wine. Sagas & Serenades is the sour option, with acidity from strawberries paired with sweetness from honey.
The full article by Madison Magazine can be found here.
Finding ‘Lost History’ in Your Glass
Alum Helps Continue Family’s Mead-Making Tradition, Honoring Holocaust Survivor and Winery Founder
The sweetness and light of fermented honey blend with crisp flavors
of Frederick County-grown apples or richly sweet grapes, evoking notes
of cinnamon or honeysuckle … well, that sounds intriguing. But what is
it, you might be asking?
In a country where wine frequently means well-structured (i.e.
pricey) French vintages or fruity blasts from California or Australia,
it’s a fair question. The answer: a different kind of wine entirely,
known as mead. After a heyday hundreds (or thousands) of years ago and being relegated more recently to renaissance fairs, it’s now “on the rise,” according to Vogue.
It’s never really fallen from favor, however, in Eastern Europe,
where the Loew family began crafting it more than 150 years ago, a
tradition it continues today at Loew Vineyards in Mt. Airy, Md.
Rachel Loew-Lipman ‘15, winemaker and vineyard manager, is working to
uphold the Loew legacy and share her family’s story through every glass
of mead (or grape-based vintage) that’s poured.
“I want to reconnect people to a beautiful but lost history,” said
Loew-Lipman, who graduated with degrees in plant science, horticulture
and crop production and in communication.
The full article by Maryland Today can be found here.
Sweetgale Meadery wins medals
Homer meadery wins first-place, best of show awards in Texas Mead Cup.
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Photo by Sweetgale Meadworks & Cider House owner Jason Davis
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Continuing a Homer [AK] tradition of crafting award-winning meads,
Sweetgale Meadworks & Cider House won two awards in the ninth annual
Texas Mead Cup. According to a press release from Sweetgale owner Jason
Davis, Sweetgale took first place in the berry melomel category for its
Alpine Blueberry Mead and then won the grand prize in the Best in Show
category.
Another Homer meadery, Odin Meads, also won second place in the
varietal meads category for its oak-aged blackberry and honey mead. The
results were announced live on Feb. 27 in La Grange, Texas.
Davis wrote that the “Best in Show” award is “further evidence
that Alaskan honey and berries are world-class, and worth promoting.”
The full article by Homer News can be found here.
Daggers Meadery is Granville’s first farm winery, crafting wines from honey
Honeybees
are amazing insects, and one small business in Western Massachusetts is
growing thanks to the bees’ tireless work, coupled with a big dose of
curiosity.
In
2009, Mimi’s Hilltop Apiary was born from harvesting honey and beeswax
atop Prospect Mountain in the Hampden County hilltown of Granville.
There,
Mark and Tammy Cressotti, along with their son, Austin, and daughter,
Jessica Haas, worked to bring their aged apple orchard back to life by
beekeeping.
Last August, they opened Daggers Meadery at 35 North Lane, where customers come to sample their creations.
Daggers
Meadery now has eight still and two sparkling varieties of mead. “Our
traditional meads like ‘Berserker Mead,’ are made with golden honey,
while our ‘Prediction Mead’ is made with dark amber honey from Japanese
knotweed,” Cressotti says.
They
also have fruit mead, called melomel, that is made with pear, blueberry
and berry blends. Their pyments, mead crafted from grapes, include
“Revenge,” made with red grapes and is naturally carbonated, and they
have a white grape called “Longship.”
To learn more, visit the website, daggersmeadery.com, or call 413-214-5245 to book reservations.
The full article by Mass Live can be found here.
Austin meadery files for Ch. 11 bankruptcy
Meridian Hive tries to stay in business; Assets could be sold off, attorney says
Meridian Hive continues to produce mead, according to the attorney representing the company in bankruptcy court,
Todd Headden of Hayward PLLC
The full article by Austin Business Journal can be found here.
Magic potion in Midlothian: Funktastic Meads brings an age-old craft brew to the county
Nearly 10,000 years after humans discovered how to make mead –
fermenting honey water and yeast to produce a pleasant and tasty
alcoholic beverage – there’s finally a tap room devoted to wine’s less
popular cousin in Chesterfield’s Alverser Plaza shopping center. It’s
called
Funktastic Meads.
Owners Matthew and Heather Carroll are ready to create a buzz.
Matthew is a specialty chemical salesman with a penchant for craft
brewing. After years of making beer, he turned his talents to mead,
determined to elevate the ancient beverage to modern standards. Heather
is an accountant. After years of watching Matthew experiment at home,
the CPA crunched a few numbers. Would it be possible to move the
operation out of their home? At the time, the Carroll's had partnered
with Lazy Days Winery in Amherst. They were selling 200 bottles per
month, but it was 90 minutes away from home. Heather recalls the
calculation.
“Sometimes they’d sell out in 30 seconds. Sometimes they’d sell out
in an hour, but they were selling out every Saturday, once a month.”
Promising numbers. Plus, adds Heather, “he just really wanted his own
tap room. And I love the mead, and everybody we share with thinks it’s
good. And so, here we are.”
Moving into their own space would also spare the Carrolls and their
8-year-old daughter, Aliza, the stress of running a meadery at home. The
CPA sighs with a smile. “I’m super happy about having the mead out of
my house because there was honey everywhere. I would go to open up a
drawer and get honey on my hands. It was all over the kitchen. There’s
mead on our ceiling.”
The Carrolls produce both still and carbonated meads on tap and
switch stock regularly. They say customers appreciate the variety. “One
of reasons they come back is because our board is constantly rotating.
So every week we have at least two new meads on tap. If somebody’s
getting a flight, every time they come, they can get two new selections.
Every time they come.”
They also sell bottles of mead online.
And don’t fall for the fallacy that mead, because it’s made from
honey, has to be sweet. Heather Caroll puts that to rest: “Pretty much
everybody that comes in here can find something that they like, and
usually it surprises them. It’s fun to watch them taste it and go,
‘Whoa, that’s really good.’” She laughs. “I’m like, ‘Did you expect it
not to be good?’”
The full article by Chesterfield Observer can be found here.