The simplest way to pair mead is by weight, not by rules. Dry, delicate meads act like a crisp white wine, so put them with seafood, poultry, and fresh cheese. Fruit-forward melomels are happy next to bold cheese and dessert. And the dark, malty end of the lineup, braggot and bochet, was basically built for Oklahoma barbecue.
One rule worth remembering
If you only keep one thing, keep this: the mead should be at least as sweet as the plate. A dry mead next to a sweet dessert tastes thin and washed out. A sweet mead next to salty smoke tastes great. From there, three combinations cover most tables.
Crisp and light. A dry traditional mead or a sparkling hydromel with grilled fish, oysters, roast chicken, goat cheese, or a summer salad. The honey lifts it and the dry finish cleans your palate between bites.
Fruit and heat. A berry melomel or apple cyser with sharp cheddar, charcuterie, pork, or a fruit tart. Fruit meads match the plate’s sweetness and take the edge off spicy food, which makes them the quiet trick for hot dishes.
Smoke and char. Braggot and caramelized bochet with brisket, ribs, burnt ends, aged gouda, or chocolate. Honey and smoke both run on caramel, so they meet in the middle.
An Oklahoma table
We’re building our hall in Broken Arrow, where barbecue is most of the food groups and the local honey tastes like wildflower prairie. Our taproom boards will lean into that: smoked meats, Oklahoma cheese, and honey from hives we can name. There’s more on that in our Oklahoma honey, and you can see the meads we’re making to go with it.
The best guide is your own mouth
Nobody can pair for your palate better than you can. Get the basics down in How to Taste Mead, then take the palate quiz to find a starting style. When the doors open, come hungry.