The Denver Post

drink: Mead sheds its wenches-and jousting image.

- By M. Carrie Allan

In this era of constant accusation­s of media bias — left-wing, right-wing, gull-wing (that’s bias against DeLoreans) — I confess: I have a long-held bias against mead. Despite regularly incorporat­ing honey syrups into cocktails, until recently I’d largely avoided honey’s fermented iteration, either straight or as a mixer.

The source of my bias was a Renaissanc­e festival I attended years ago. I expected to love it; after all, I’d read “The Chronicles of Narnia” at least five times. I can wench with the best of them. When we went, my friends and I bought cups of mead and “medieval” food (crusaders apparently got around on funnel cake and Ye Olde Empanadas) and wandered about taking it all in: the jousts, the bearded men in velvet pantaloons smithying various weapons.

Giddy from the mead, I paid extra to see a creature billed as “The World’s Littlest Unicorn,” which turned out to be a goat in a jacket. No one had even bothered to stick a fake horn on it. When the little girl ahead of me said plaintivel­y, “That’s not a unicorn!,” The World’s Jerkiest Carny told her she was right: “And do you know why it’s not a unicorn? Because children don’t believe in unicorns anymore.”

Next day I woke with a sugar headache that felt like I’d been hit with a mace. And I hadn’t even had that much mead. For days, a taste of disillusio­nment lingered, along with the faint scent of goat.

Leave a hateful note in the comments — or pin one to my door with an elvish dagger from the SkyMall catalogue — but perhaps you can understand why it took me a while to start mixing drinks with this ancient beverage that, like so many other categories of older food culture, has resurfaced in our contempora­ry one.

With its long history and connection with agricultur­e, locavorism and fermentati­on, mead seems a particular­ly outsider art in the often-corporate beverage world. Some argue it’s the oldest fermented drink, though the Renaissanc­e fair connection is off-base: Honey is an ancient and virtually global sweetener, and mead has roots in China, India and Africa as well as Europe. (The Ethiopian honey wine tej is arguably a mead variation; how much of a variation depends on how long an argument you want to have). While honey-based, meads typically incorporat­e a variety of other fruits, herbs and spices, allowing yeasts to create fermentati­on.

Meadmakers have kept to their craft, and new ones have come along. Over the past decade, modern meadmakers (or mazers) have been bringing the drink back. A big dent has been made by Charm City Meadworks in Baltimore, which has been producing some lovely varieties of dry, fruit-enhanced and herbal meads. Bars and bartenders are reintroduc­ing it to those who either don’t know it or turned against it because they experience­d it the way I did: cloying, accompanie­d by a festively dressed ruminant.

“There’s a lot of stereotype­s about it,” says chef David Guas, owner of Bayou Bakery, who came to appreciate mead through his work with the National Honey Board.

I’ve found that, as a cocktail component some meads don’t hold up as a base without a solid assist from other ingredient­s. With a good dry gin, fruit or amaro component added, they can do well, but I’ve had several mead cocktails where I kept waiting for interest to kick in and it never happened; mismixed, they can end in a drink that tastes strangely flattened.

But some herbal dry meads make for interestin­g martini variations; some sweet herbal meads sub well for sweet vermouth. I made a beautifull­y seasonal rye Manhattan with Orchid Cellar’s Archer, a mead spiced with clove, cinnamon and juniper.

An experience­d bartender, Arley Marks wasn’t immune from mead preconcept­ions, but when his friend Raphael Lyon of Brooklyn meadery Enlightenm­ent Wines started bringing him meads to work with, “pretty quickly preconcept­ions were blown out of the water.”

He ended up coming on board. Now the owner/operator of Honey’s, the tasting room and bar for the meadery, Marks says their dry cherry mead “brings a Christmas-y, piney note to the classic Martinez.” At the bar, the Dagger Martinez is served with the base of the glass dipped in Eastern hemlock needles.

In his seasonal Cranberry Delight, Guas pairs Charm City’s Wildflower mead with a caramelize­d honey and ginger syrup and charred cranberrie­s. Make the base in advance and pour the effervesce­nt mead fresh for each drink; it’s perfect for holiday parties.

Cranberry Delight

8 servings Ingredient­s

FOR THE SYRUP AND BASE:

1 cup honey (see headnote) 1 cup fresh orange juice 5 to 6 ounces fresh ginger root, peeled, then minced or grated (½ cup) 1 cup fresh cranberrie­s 2 cups unsweetene­d cranberry juice

FOR THE DRINK:

Ice 4 ounces mead Directions

Bring the honey to a boil in a large, deep saucepan over high heat. (It will froth and bubble; the large pot is needed to contain the volume.) Cook for 8 to 10 minutes, or until it turns dark amber and emits a slightly bitter scent, but be careful not to overcook, and adjust the heat as needed. Turn off the heat.

Gradually add the orange juice, being careful to avoid the whoosh of steam, then stir in the ginger. Let it steep for a few minutes (just long enough for the ginger to soften a bit), then transfer to a blender (or use an immersion blender) to blend the syrup. Strain it through a fine-mesh strainer and reserve; discard the solids.

Heat a small cast-iron skillet over high heat for 5 minutes, then gently stir in the cranberrie­s and allow them to char for 5 to 6 minutes; they will hiss and pop, and some will start to blacken.

Transfer the cranberrie­s to a 1-quart (or larger) pitcher. Add the honey-ginger syrup and the cranberry juice. The yield is about 4 cups. Cool completely and store in the refrigerat­or if not using right away.

FOR THE DRINK:

Fill a highball glass twothirds full with ice. Add 4 ounces of the drink base, including several cranberrie­s, and top with 4 ounces of the mead. Stir gently and serve.

The Dagger Martinez

8 to 10 servings Dagger cherry mead is available online, http://enlightenm­entwines.com. Ingredient­s Ice 2 ounces barrel-aged gin, such as Breuckelen

1 ounce Dagger cherry mead (see headnote) 2 dashes orange bitters 1 barspoon maraschino liqueur (not the liquid from a jar of maraschino cherries)

Small rosemary sprig, for garnish Directions

Fill a mixing glass two-thirds with ice. Add the barrel-aged gin, mead, bitters and maraschino liqueur; stir for 30 seconds, then strain into a coupe glass or a “Nick and Nora”-style cocktail (martini) glass.

Garnish with the rosemary.

 ??  ??
 ?? Special to The Washington Post ?? Cranberry Delight combines tart, sparkling mead with the seasonal flavors of cranberry and ginger. Goran Kosanovic,
Special to The Washington Post Cranberry Delight combines tart, sparkling mead with the seasonal flavors of cranberry and ginger. Goran Kosanovic,
 ??  ?? This riff on the classic Martinez uses Enlightenm­ent Wines’ Dagger, a tart cherryand-yarrow mead, in place of vermouth.
This riff on the classic Martinez uses Enlightenm­ent Wines’ Dagger, a tart cherryand-yarrow mead, in place of vermouth.

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