Sloe Gin 2020

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Discussion

CharlesdeGaulle

Original Poster:

26,266 posts

180 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
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Is anyone harvesting sloes yet? I think my local ones are ready.

Any special tips or favourite recipes? I saw one suggesting golden castor sugar, has anyone tried that?

Mobile Chicane

20,829 posts

212 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
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CharlesdeGaulle said:
Any special tips or favourite recipes?
Make lots.

TeaNoSugar

1,239 posts

165 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
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I made some last year. It was lovely. I looked up a recipe, can’t remember exactly which but very similar to this one:

http://www.corshamfield.co.uk/sloe-gin-proper-gin-...

It was actually a pretty good recipe because it uses no sugar for the initial 3-5 month period where you’re soaking the sloes and spices in gin, after that bit, the prep was the normal filtering and then if you wanted to, making a very simple sugar syrup which could be added just before bottling, so you ended up with something that wasn’t tooSweet. In the end I added hardly any sugar syrup and it tasted really good.

The main mistake I made was making a batch with a £24 bottle Sipsmiths gin. I did another batch with 1.5 litres of Sainsbury’s own brand gin for £14. The difference was virtually nothing in the finished drink as you use some spices in the making which means the subtle flavours in expensive gin are obscured by the flavour Sloe berries, cinnamon, cloves etc. Cheap gin does just fine (maybe not too industrial, but basic Sainsbury’s own was fine).

TeaNoSugar

1,239 posts

165 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
quotequote all
Mobile Chicane said:
Make lots.
This. Economies of scale laugh, and if you’re anything like me you end up giving bottles as presents to family so it’s good to have plenty. Just to be sure!

MXRod

2,749 posts

147 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
quotequote all
Don't worry about premium gin ,we used Aldi gin last year ,and results were excellent , hic
Spike berries ,or freeze them first to split them to extract maximum flavour .and golden caster sugar , agitate every couple of days to desolve sugar and extract flavour from sloes

Edited by MXRod on Saturday 24th October 17:38

CharlesdeGaulle

Original Poster:

26,266 posts

180 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
quotequote all
Picked a couple of kilos today. Most of the berries were very large and juicy so I'm hopeful for a good result. Used a BBC recipe with golden castor sugar. Have made two litres so far but have run out of bottles and gin (well, I've got loads of the good stuff left but no more cheap Gordon's).

The rest of the berries are in the freezer and I'll make more next weekend.

Mabbs9

1,083 posts

218 months

Saturday 24th October 2020
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I've added some damsons this year. I'll report back about Christmas time. But I agree, it's a good time to be harvesting some sloes.

Venisonpie

3,272 posts

82 months

Sunday 25th October 2020
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Mine and Lady VP's hopefully ready for Christmas.

loskie

5,220 posts

120 months

Sunday 25th October 2020
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you are "supposed" to wait till after they've been frosted then pick them though I guess the freezer may do that job too. I think I still have some left that I made in 2001?

gazapc

1,321 posts

160 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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Been making it for the last 10 years or so, I have a drop of a nice one from 2012 in the back of the cupboard.

Lucky enough to have some amazing Sloe ladened bushes within yards of the entrance to our road. 1.6 kg collected in less than an hour on my own today.

I agree with the posters above that you can generally go for the cheapest gin however a few years ago we were on holiday in Italy where they sell gin at crazily low prices, think it was 4 euro per 700ml bottle for the cheapest supermarket stuff. That is 40% of the price of supermarket own brand stuff in the UK. It was September and we had loads of space in our luggage anyway so brought some back and used it. It had a certain...semi-industrial flavour. Never again.

Puggit

48,440 posts

248 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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Sainsburys do a large 1.5L bottle of own brand - good stuff for this.

Definitely prick the sloes, it's a pretty idiot proof process apart from that. I did tend to freeze the berries if there hadn't been a frost.

Mobile Chicane

20,829 posts

212 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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If you are lucky enough to ever find bullaces (wild damsons) there is a Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall treatment which is simply epic.

Like every red fruit rolled into one, without the overriding taste of juniper that gin gives:

Bullace vodka:

2Kg bullaces
1Kg sugar
3 bottles of cheap vodka

Prick each fruit several times with a pin (the boring bit), transfer to a demi-john and add the sugar and vodka.

Leave for at least six months.


Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

186 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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All our jars are tied up with making plum gin. Meant to be ready next week so then the big bag of sloes in my freezer can come into their own.

It was a very good year for sloes, that's for sure.

Barchettaman

6,309 posts

132 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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Well reminded - I need to pick them this week.

I do 2 types.

Standard sloe gin with Lidl own brand (€7/litre)

Xmas slow vodka with cinnamon sticks, bitter almond, vanilla and a clove or two. Again, cheap vodka from Lidl or Aldi.

I used to up the octane a bit with 180 proof rectified spirit, but haven’t seen that stuff in the supermarket for a while. Pity, as it gave it a lovely kick.

I STRONGLY recommend giving the spiced sloe voddie a try. It’s a winner.

Also, kir royale with sie gin and an extra dry Sekt is a great way to start Xmas dinner.

Barchettaman

6,309 posts

132 months

Monday 26th October 2020
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I should add: I tried sloe white rum a few years back, didn’t work at all.

I’ve been meaning to roast a duck, stuffed with sloes post-decanting, I bet it would make for awesome gravy. Haven’t tried it yet. Maybe this year.

Venisonpie

3,272 posts

82 months

Tuesday 27th October 2020
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Barchettaman said:
I should add: I tried sloe white rum a few years back, didn’t work at all.

I’ve been meaning to roast a duck, stuffed with sloes post-decanting, I bet it would make for awesome gravy. Haven’t tried it yet. Maybe this year.
That sounds a great idea.

MXRod

2,749 posts

147 months

Tuesday 27th October 2020
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Two bottles so far, lots of sloes in freezer , but we have put the remaining Kilner jars away and can't find them at present
A year or 2 ago year I was listening to a R4 program "Kitchen Cabinet " with Jay Rayner , and a guest was talking about home made whiskey liqueur .
I had a bottle of single malt given as a gift ( the next bit is sacrilege ) not being a lover of whiskey I decided to give the liqueur a go ,
The whiskey was infused with lots of dark fruit and a goodly amount of light brown sugar and agitated much the same as sloe gin , every few months the brew was filtered the spent fruit was removed ,and more sugar and dark fruit was added .
After about 18 months the liqueur was passed through a coffee filter ( good for filtering sloe gin as well ) and bottled.
The resulting drink was smooth without the harshness of straight whiskey the essence of whiskey however was still present .
Again , cheap whiskey as a base and a different liqueur to try




Edited by MXRod on Tuesday 27th October 15:19

CharlesdeGaulle

Original Poster:

26,266 posts

180 months

Tuesday 27th October 2020
quotequote all
Just got more gin. A 2 x 1 litre pack of Gordon's is 23 EUR here and I've just noticed it's the 47% stuff. This next batch is going to be a strong 'un!

Mobile Chicane

20,829 posts

212 months

Tuesday 27th October 2020
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CharlesdeGaulle said:
Just got more gin. A 2 x 1 litre pack of Gordon's is 23 EUR here and I've just noticed it's the 47% stuff. This next batch is going to be a strong 'un!
Where is this? Sounds heavenly.

CharlesdeGaulle

Original Poster:

26,266 posts

180 months

Tuesday 27th October 2020
quotequote all
Luxembourg, staff shop. I can get it cheaper but need to get on with it. Not a bad gig.