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Gardening

Sloe gin

(14 Posts)
morag89 Tue 16-Aug-11 11:18:55

I'd like to try and make some sloe gin this year. How do I tell when they are ready for picking? I've been blackberry picking already this week. I've noticed sloes in the hedgerows as well, but I've never picked them before, is this too early?

Baggy Tue 16-Aug-11 11:57:09

If they are good and dark with a 'bloom', they're ready. Fab stuff, sloe gin. I seem to remember picking them in early September in Hampshire and Oxfordshire.

supernana Tue 16-Aug-11 12:58:22

Our lovely next door neighbour knows of a local, 'secret' source of top quality sloe berries with which he infuses copious amounts of Plymouth gin. Party-time with him is an uplifting experience! wink

janreb Tue 16-Aug-11 18:06:01

Down here in Cornwall they are just about ready now. I've made damson gin this morning but will do sloe too.

Zephrine Tue 16-Aug-11 18:29:07

I know where there's some sloes and I know where there's some gin, what do I do next?

Baggy Tue 16-Aug-11 19:47:38

I was taught to do it this way:

Quarter fill a bottle with sugar.
Then fill up the bottle with sloes, nearly to the top.
Pour in gin (cheap gin will do) also nearly to the top.
Screw top back on, give it all a good tumble and store. Every now and then, tumble it to mix stuff. Ready in about three months.

Decant into another bottle. Drink.

Keeps for ages if you forget about it!

Some people de-stone the sloes but then you get bitty sloe gin.

I used to tip the strained sloes onto the compost heap and then the blackbirds got drunk as well.

Soupy Tue 16-Aug-11 20:00:46

A good friend who makes sloe gin (and sloe vodka; hic!) says the sloes are better once there has been a frost.

To this end she'll pick hers whenever they are ready and then freeze them.

We saw some promising ones when we were out walking at the weekend

Zephrine Tue 16-Aug-11 20:06:29

Thanks Baggy I love the idea of tipsy blackbirds, does their singing get raucous?

artygran Tue 16-Aug-11 20:09:44

Love sloe gin - supposed to be very good for you; can't remember why though (obviously doesn't enhance mental capacity then!)

Jacey Tue 16-Aug-11 20:21:48

Only thing I would add to Baggy's method ...is yes they need a frost ...yes pick them when they have the bloom ...generally means they're rip ...but only take the plump ones ...*prick them so juices can flow*... lay bottle on its side ...rotate weekly ... dark cupboard... only use cheap gin or vodka.

This has been a funny year regards weather ...so may be ready ...sometimes I've almost had to wait until October to pick the sloes ...which makes it suspect for Christmas ...will obviously depend on which part of the country you live in

A wonderful drink ...but don't drive after enjoying

Aurelia Tue 16-Aug-11 22:59:45

I use the same method as Jacey, picked after a frost or into the freezer overnight to make pricking easier. Once soaking, leave for about three months.
To use up the left over boozy sloes -:
Slightly mash the sloes just enough so that you can fish out the stones. Gently melt some good quality dark chocolate. Mix fruit and chocolate together and spread in a shallow container lined with non stick parchment or similar. Mark into squares and leave somewhere cool to set. Chop up ~ Cook's perks!!

Aurelia

I also make bramble whisky.

Baggy Wed 17-Aug-11 07:20:30

Good idea, aurelia! Why did I never think of that?

I used to make haw brandy as well. Haws from hawthorn.

janreb Wed 17-Aug-11 09:16:44

I always freeze sloes first - it saves all the pricking as they tend to burst when frozen - well mine do anyway.
Sloe gin is the only thing that will clear my husband's chest in winter, one dose of that and he's fine, or perhaps he is just happy and doesn't notice it!

Baggy Wed 17-Aug-11 09:33:09

I never pricked or froze the sloes and it always worked really well. I think the combination of strong alcohol and sugar can get through the skins, especially the bit where the stalk went, and of course, the sloe juices can come out, sloely!

I once had two big tubs of wine must starting in the kitchen. DD3 (age three) asked what was in them. One was sloe and rosehip. So I told her the black berries are sloes and the red....

"and the red ones are fast", she said.

We called it fast and sloe wine.