Sloe gin

mex

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Last xmas a friend of mine gave me a bottle of his brew and to say it was delicious is an understatement.Has anyone made it? Last weekend I picked 2 kilos of sloes and 2 kilos of damsons.
I have,this year decided to make my own!!

The recipe I have is 500g of sloes or damsons, 450g caster sugar and 1ltr of gin.mix it all together in a large bottle, shake the bottle now and then,after 90 days strain it,bottle it and drink it,if its too sharp add more sugar.

Any other recipes you know of?
 
They say the best time for sloe's is after the first frost.
You need to split / prick or chuck'em in the freezer for a bit, otherwise.

For us oldies, in old money,
1lb sloes / 1lb ordinary sugar bottle of gin
and leave it for frigging ages, well it seems like it anyway.
"Invert" a couple of times a week.
After 2- 3 months, strain, and taste.
If its not quite there yet, leave for another month and then repeat.

( I cook like that too, just chuck it in, it'll be alright :D)
I have some that's 5 years old (I have no idea how it lasted that long either)
but its rich thick smooth, and potent just like a liqueur should be :thumbs:
 
I'v been making Sloe Gin for the past 20 years. Cobra's recipe is what I use, except for the freezing. I prefer to use them fresh and just slash the skins. We still have half a bottle left from last year, but haven't made any this year yet.

I make mine in a wine bidon I bought in France many years ago. I use 3 bottles of the cheapest Gin I can find.
 
I recently had a taste of some sloe whiskey made by a friend, very nice indeed. :)
 
We make sloe gin every year - the recipes above all sound about the same as ours. You do need to prick them, and I prefer to shake the bottle rather than just invert for the first few weeks. The longer you leave it the more syrup like it becomes - yumyumyum.
This year we also made red currant vodka, red currant gin, black currant vodka, and black currant gin - they're really really nice!
 
We make sloe gin every year - the recipes above all sound about the same as ours.

Actually, I suppose there are only so many variants you can use
Sloes/gin/sugar/bottles/leave it alone for as long as possible............... :D
 
Hmmmmm!

Just looked in my cupboard and found the sloe gin I did last year :thumbs:

.......but I forgot about it until this thread popped up and have neglected to remove the sloes! :eek:


.....is it boogered?



Heather
 
Hmmmmm!

Just looked in my cupboard and found the sloe gin I did last year :thumbs:

.......but I forgot about it until this thread popped up and have neglected to remove the sloes! :eek:


.....is it boogered?



Heather
Strain and taste, strain and taste
I'm sure it'll be fine :thumbs:
 
If you want a nice spicy drink for Christmas, try chilli vodka.

1 bottle vodka (naturlich) open bottle and insert dried chillis, does not need many as the strength comes from the time they are left in there. Reseal bottle and leave it somewhere warm for a couple of weeks then freeze it, remove as required and drink neat. The combination of freezing voddie and burning chilli has to be tasted to be believed :D
 
once you have desloed the gin, keep the sloes and add red wine, and repeat as per sloe gin minus the sugar....

it thickens up quite nicely, and those little sloes are fully of alcohol, so end up with something halfway between a heavy red and a port!
 
once you have desloed the gin, keep the sloes and add red wine, and repeat as per sloe gin minus the sugar....

it thickens up quite nicely, and those little sloes are fully of alcohol, so end up with something halfway between a heavy red and a port!


Now you are trying to get me into REAL trouble! :lol:
 
I remember putting a bottle of Mateus Rose in the freezer to chill for an hour, a week later and SWMBO had me by the short 'n' curlies for trashing the freezer as the bottle had smashed in there.

I bought 2 70cl bottles of Gordons for 11 each in Morrissons this afternoon and they are now fermenting away with some of the sloes we picked. I spoke to my friend who put me onto this nectar regarding when to pick sloes,his opinion is pick them when they are ready and if a frost has'nt hit them,put them in the freezer for 24hrs.
 
Too early! :nono:

They are nowhere near ready down here!
 
If you want a really nice variation on sloe gin and have lots of patience, use dark muscavado sugar. It's slower maturing than with white sugar due to the slight bitterness of the muscavado. But it mellows to a delicious caramel. I've got 3l maturing from last year - still needs a touch more sugar.

If you want something quicker maturing, I've a ginger liqueur recipe that's ready in a couple of weeks. And round about now is the right time to start a Christmas liqueur - it will be better next Christmas but will be pleasant enough this year (tastes like liquid Christmas cake).
 
once you have desloed the gin, keep the sloes and add red wine, and repeat as per sloe gin minus the sugar....

it thickens up quite nicely, and those little sloes are fully of alcohol, so end up with something halfway between a heavy red and a port!

Now that is a must try :thumbs:
 
sod all sloes in my fave hunting places this year!!!!
 
What sort of bottles do you use to store this?
Does it ferment so need a strong one?
Have a troubling memory of chain reaction explosions when experimenting with elderflower wine...
 
It doesn't ferment. You're using gin, so well above the tolerance levels of any yeast!

Use any container (glass for preference) that will hold twice the volume of gin you intend to use. I have a couple of large clip-top jars that each hold a couple of litres, but last year used a demijohn as I wanted to make a big batch. The container must have a close-fitting lid to prevent the gin evaporating.


Off to pick elderberries and blackberries this afternoon, that combination has been nominated as my big batch of winemaking for this Autumn.

Looks like a good year for sloes again, but they really do benefit from a frost. Might try sloe wine in a small batch as well.
 
Grabbed 3.5lb yesterday, now have a gallon of gin on the go. Along with some bramble vodka!
 
We don't get sloes here - to my knowledge - but I do have a very big kilner jar full of cherries and vodka on the go :D And I did some Limoncello a couple of years ago that was super scrummy - must go and rob buy some lemons :D Might try the same with orange too :thinking:
 
What sort of bottles do you use to store this?
Does it ferment so need a strong one?
Have a troubling memory of chain reaction explosions when experimenting with elderflower wine...

I am using some lidded 2 litre bottles from Ikea (£2 each?).It does'nt ferment so its not going to go pop!
 
Managed to get 2kg of really fat sloes from Summer Leys this year, two weeks ago. Great harvest, all off one tree.

I freeze em for 2 days, then they go into a 1 gallon demijon, with 1kg of muscavado and some vanilla castor sugar. Shaken as often as we could over a week, then topped up with cheap vodka. It will now sit on the shelf in the wardrobe in the bedroom for 6 months then get strained and bottled. Then it gets left for 12 months plus, opened next Christmas, and yes, we do have that patience !!

Thanks for the red wine second go around tip, I'll try that this year.
 
We don't get sloes here - to my knowledge - but I do have a very big kilner jar full of cherries and vodka on the go :D And I did some Limoncello a couple of years ago that was super scrummy - must go and rob buy some lemons :D Might try the same with orange too :thinking:

hmmmm naranjacillo....
 
We make damson gin and leave it for a whole year. Comes out nice a thick and slurpy. Then we eat the damsons with Muller yoghurt poured over them. They are delicious, but don't drive the car after a dishful!
 
If you want something quicker maturing, I've a ginger liqueur recipe that's ready in a couple of weeks. And round about now is the right time to start a Christmas liqueur - it will be better next Christmas but will be pleasant enough this year (tastes like liquid Christmas cake).

Sounds interesting, what's the recipe?
 
Copied from the book of liqueur recipes I've been preparing (for about a year, takes a while to test all the recipes!). Judging by the spices thus is one I've adapted from a German recipe I found. The dried figs make the cake a bit gritty with their seeds. You might want to leave them out, but they do add a rich flavour. The fruit mix and quantities can be varied to your preference. Vanilla paste can be used in place of the vanilla pod.

Winter/Christmas liqueur

70 cl brandy
20 cl water
1 tablespoon honey
150 g brown sugar
120 g dried figs
120 g dried apricots
120 g dried apple / apple rings
50 g raisins
½ vanilla pod
½ stick of cinnamon
3 cloves
3 red peppercorns
1 cardamom pod

Steep the dried fruit in the brandy in a large glass jar for three days in a warm place. You may substitute other dried fruit to taste as long as the total weight of fruit is approximately the same.

Scrape the vanilla pod and add the seeds with the peppercorns, the other spices and the honey to the brandy and fruit. Dissolve the sugar in the water at a low simmer.

Allow the sugar solution to cool to 50°C and add to the brandy, fruit and spice mixture.

Leave for six weeks in a cool, dark place shaking occasionally.

Filter and bottle.

If you use the fruit intended for your Christmas Cake, this will make the perfect liqueur to accompany a slice it served with cheese. The quantity of dried fruit used for the liqueur is flexible and will accommodate more or less.


Boozy fruit cake

225 g self-raising flour
200 g butter
200 g muscavado sugar
4 eggs

The fruit from the liqueur (remove the spices)

Grease a 20 cm springform cake tin. Preheat oven to 160C/Gas 3.

Roughly chop the fruit.

Cream together the sugar and butter.

Beat in the eggs one at a time, adding a spoon of flour with each.

Fold in the remaining flour, and then fold in the chopped fruit. Keep it light and don't overmix.

Spoon into the cake tin, place into preheated oven and bake for 1.5 hrs or until a knife/skewer comes out clean. You may need to cover the top of the cake part-way through to prevent it burning.

This will recipe produce a medium sized fruit cake, for a Christmas Cake multiply all the ingredients by 1.5 and add an extra 200 g of your choice of dried fruit.



Edit: If deciding to make a Christmas cake, add 200g of sultanas or a mix of sultanas and glace cherry halves to the booze at the start. From memory the cake recipe was based on a HFW recipe. Last year I had to do it all twice.. the test cake didn't make it to December, never mind Christmas Day! A bit of warm apricot jam, marzipan and icing finishes the cake.
 
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We always make our slow gin with clear honey rather than sugar, and we don't add too much so the gin has a lovely sharp, mouthwatering bite rather than being sickly sweet and sticky. Lots may like it like that but we find it much nicer a bit tart :-)
 
LOADS of sloes on the trees this year. IIRC they're best left there until they've been frosted but they've all usually been picked before then. Loads of blackberries around as well (although I did put a dent in their numbers!)
 
LOADS of sloes on the trees this year. IIRC they're best left there until they've been frosted but they've all usually been picked before then. Loads of blackberries around as well (although I did put a dent in their numbers!)

pick em and freeze them for a night - I then bash them with a rolling pin before squashing them into bottles!
 
If I liked (or could even stand the stench of!) gin, I might. My favourite home made liqueur is "Rakomelo", a concoction of Cretan Raki (the same stuff as French Marc and Italian Grappa), honey, cinnamon and clove. Need to cook up another batch...
 
If I liked (or could even stand the stench of!) gin, I might. My favourite home made liqueur is "Rakomelo", a concoction of Cretan Raki (the same stuff as French Marc and Italian Grappa), honey, cinnamon and clove. Need to cook up another batch...

As I said before realising you had checked out of the pub....sloes also work very well with vodka, brandy and whiskey ;)
 
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