Mead is the oldest drink people ever made. Fermented honey goes back roughly 9,000 years, which puts it ahead of beer and ahead of wine. It crowned feasts in Norse halls, ran through Greek and Celtic myth, and gave us the word honeymoon. Now it’s in the middle of one of the better comebacks in craft drinks.
Before anyone wrote it down
The first mead probably made itself. Rainwater got into wild honey, wild yeast went to work, and somebody curious took a sip. The oldest hard evidence comes from pottery jars at Jiahu in China, around 7000 BC, with residue of honey, rice, and fruit fermentation in them. After that the trail shows up everywhere people kept bees: Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Greece, the Baltic, the British Isles. Just about every culture with honey came up with honey wine on its own.
The drink of gods and skalds
Nobody loved mead like the Norse. In the sagas, Odin lies and shape-shifts his way into stealing the Mead of Poetry, three vats of fermented honey and wisdom that turned whoever drank it into a poet. In Valhalla the dead drink mead that never empties. Back on the ground, mead sealed real oaths, and a chieftain’s hall got judged by its mead bench. The skald, the bard who kept the hall’s stories, sang for his share of it.
That’s who we named ourselves after. The horn, the long table, the story told well. We get into it more in our story.
The long quiet stretch
So why did it fade? Honey is expensive to make. One hive works a whole season for what a field of barley gives up in weeks. Once grain and grapes got industrialized, mead slid from everyday drink to luxury to curiosity. It survived in monasteries, in Ethiopian tej houses, and in Polish miód pitny cellars while beer and wine took over the taverns.
The comeback, and Oklahoma’s part in it
Craft drinking changed the math. People started wanting small-batch, local, honest things with a story behind them, and mead has about the best story going. Meaderies have been opening across the country faster than at any point since the longship days, making everything from dry traditionals to deep, dark bochets.
Our chapter starts in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma: veteran-owned, built on prairie wildflower honey, opening soon. Get the basics in what mead is, read up on the styles, then grab a seat in the Mead Hall on the homepage.