I would enjoy such a conversation. Excess of quinces, and indeed of apples, is a non-problem I also have this year. Last year was pretty light on both, and I hadn't enough excess to do much brewing, but this year I have good plenty of both. As well as giving fruit to my friends and selling it at the Farmers Market, I have been giving a lot to the local Produce Share.
One of the things I plan to make is a quince mead (not sure whether that would be classified as a perry, a cyser, or just quince melomel). And some year when I get to my neighbour's medlar crop before the birds do, I'd like to try making a mead using honey with the medlars. Quinces and medlars, unlike apples, are hard to juice, so I just boil those in water, strain off the pulp for making fruit paste, fruit leather, pemmican or for adding to cakes, and use the liquid instead of plain water for adding to honey to make mead.
Come to think of it, I don't know whether Minna even drinks alcohol.
Deadrose, if you are into old recipes, you might find the magazine of the Tudor Society, 'Tudor Life', quite interesting. Ríognach O'Geraghty, the spicer I have mentioned before, writes cookery articles and does videos for them. The February edition had some great old recipes for gingerbread, and there is one on rosehips coming up in the next few months -the photos in that one are from my garden.
I won't always be reliably here over the next month or two, but will drop in when I can - this weekend I'm doing plant workshops for some of the local Druids, first weekend in May is the Mediaeval Fair at Gumeracha, third weekend is the Mylor English Ale, and around the middle of May is when the Autumn/Winter foraging workshops start. Busy times.