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Recreating a medieval mead calls for a giant cauldron to caramelize honey

Screenshot of honey caramelizing in pot

Enlarge / A medieval form of mead called “bochet” calls for caramelizing raw honey in a cauldron over an open flame. (credit: Screenshot/Gemma Tarlach/Gastro Obscura )

Ah, mead , that sweet, honeyed alcoholic beverage that has been a staple at Renaissance Fairs for decades (along with giant turkey legs ). It’s also increasingly popular among home craft brewers since it’s relatively easy to make. Those in search of a unique challenge, however, are turning to a special kind of medieval mead called bochet . The only known detailed recipe with regard to bochet dates back to the late 14th century and was lost for centuries, until it has been rediscovered around 2009.

Fermentation in general has been around for millennia, and mead (“fermented honey drink”) in particular was brewed throughout ancient Europe, Africa, and Asia. Perhaps the particular earliest known reference to such a beverage ( soma ) is found in a sacred Vedic book called the Rigveda , circa 1700-1100 BCE. Mead was the drink of choice in ancient Greece; Danish warriors in typically the Old English epic poem Beowulf cavort within King Hrothgar’s mead hall; this Welsh bard Taliesin (circa 550 CE) is credited with composing a “Song of Mead”; and mead features heavily in Norse mythology.

There are many different varieties of mead from all over the world. But bochet is a unique variety because it calls regarding caramelized honey; additional spices are usually optional. This makes it attractive to craft brewers looking for something a little bit different—brewers like Gemma Tarlach, who recently detailed her experiments making bochet in the fascinating article for Atlas Obscura.

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