Jun 30 2009

Fresh Elderberry Wine Recipe

Published by auth1 at 6:17 pm under recipes

elderberry

 

 

 

 

 

 

Did you know that besides the trees’ berries making a savory wine, elderberry blossoms are used by the Swiss to make a kind of elderberry syrup? It’s a wonder all these trees aren’t stripped to the bark!

 

Ingredients:

 

3 lb Elderberries

7 pts Water

2 ¼  lb Sugar

1 tsp Acid Blend

1  tsp Nutrient

1 Campden, crush

1 pkg Wine Yeast

 

Starting S.G. 1.095-1.100

 

 

FYI: All the above ingredients can be purchased in one convenient package at letsmakefoodandwine.com!

 

Method:

 

  1. Strip from stems, when fully ripe. Wash, sort out blemished and moldy berries, and drain. Using nylon straining bag (or with press) mash and strain out juice into primary fermentor. Keeping all pulp in bag (with dried berries put in with chopped raisins), tie top, and place in primary.
  2. Stir in all other ingredients except yeast.
  3. Cover primary. After 24 hrs., add yeast. Cover primary.
  4. Stir daily, check S.G> and press pulp lightly to aid juice extraction.
  5. When ferment reaches 1.030 (about 5 days) strain juice lightly from bag. Syphon wine off sediment into glass secondary. Attach airlock.
  6. When ferment is complete (S.G. has dropped to 1.000—about 3 weeks) syphon off sediment into clean secondary. Reattach lock.
  7. To aid clearing syphon again in 2 months and again if necessary before bottling.

 

Using ¼ oz. of oak chips per gallon of wine will benefit this wine with an “aged-in-oak” flavor.

 

Varieties:

 

American Elder (Sambucus Canadensis) is the most popular. These fast growing, wild looking shrubs yield clusters of black ¼” round berries perfect for pies, jellies, and wines. In the wild and some nurseries also: Red-berried Elder (S. racemosa) and Blue Elder (S.glauca).

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