logo
#

Latest news with #YankeeHeritageCyser

Zydeco Meadery makes four meads, and each one tells a story
Zydeco Meadery makes four meads, and each one tells a story

Boston Globe

time18-03-2025

  • General
  • Boston Globe

Zydeco Meadery makes four meads, and each one tells a story

'You can't grow European style grapes in Louisiana because of the climate. It's too hot and there are some pest issues,' says Depradine. 'But then I discovered mead.' Get Winter Soup Club A six-week series featuring soup recipes and cozy vibes, plus side dishes and toppings, to get us all through the winter. Enter Email Sign Up Eric, who has both a chemistry and history background, is honest about his trials and errors with initial batches of mead. Taking viticulture classes made Eric more confident. Eventually, to accommodate full-time jobs in other fields, the Depradines moved their business up to Massachusetts, where Eric grew up. Advertisement Zydeco makes four meads, and each one tells a story. Yankee Heritage Cyser is inspired by New England colonial times and made with fermented bittersweet apples and raisins. Bayou Soleil is a co-fermentation of grape juice and wildflower honey and most closely resembles in flavor the wines sampled on the Depradines's honeymoon. I recently opened a bottle of another Zydeco mead, Atlantic Creole, made from knotweed honey collected from the rural areas of Massachusetts. In the glass, the wine smelled floral, but once I sipped a pleasant, nutty honey flavor was most prominent. There was a nice viscosity to the drink also, though not so much as to coat your throat. The story behind Carnival Rose, a hibiscus mead made with honey and ginger, is the most personal. 'Hibiscus based drinks are really popular among Afro Latinos,' says Depradine. 'The Mexican community, especially on the Gulf Coast, and also West Indians and West Africans — because it all came from the Atlantic coast of West Africa during the transatlantic slave trade — people from those regions, from Senegal to Angola, when you had a party, you usually made a red based drink, either out of the cola nut or the hibiscus plant.' Advertisement Eric's grandmother, who lives in a nursing home in Dorchester, would always make a red drink for important occasions, and it stuck with him. Dialing in the recipe, he says, was not easy. 'Oh my goodness, old people don't believe in measuring anything,' Depradine says with a laugh. 'Man, it took me a long, long time and a lot of phone calls to my grandmother.' Asked why he puts so much time and effort exploring the origin of his meads, Depradine says, 'I had some really good teachers at Boston Latin Academy.' Zydeco Meadery is a family affair, with the Depradines's teenage son and daughter giving up their Saturdays to help produce the product. Those interested in purchasing any of the Zydeco meads can email Eric directly at Gary Dzen can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store