6
votes

Dandelion Wine Recipe

posted March 31, 2009 - 6:13am
Dandelion Wine Recipe

It appears I accidentally started a discussion about Dandelion Wine on another Dandelion Xombyte. Seeing that there is no recipe on Xomba to make Dandelion Wine, I thought I’d better share one for everybody who plans on using instead of killing their Dandelions this year and before they all mysteriously show up overnight.

This is simply the recipe and not the process of how to make wine. However, a resource is also provided for anyone just beginning their wine making adventure.

These are the basic wine making supplies you will need:
First fermentation food-grade plastic tub – 10-20 gal.:
You need plenty of room for the solids and fermentation process. Check with restaurant supply stores or many fast food restaurants get pickles in large plastic
buckets.

Second fermentation containers:
Two 5-gallon water cooler jugs (one to rack into)
or several gallon-size glass cider/vinegar or wine bottles

Long handled plastic or wooden spoon for stirring the must
Fine mesh strainer or cheesecloth
Large spoon for removing solids
Hydrometer
Water lock or balloon to fit choice of second fermentation container.
6 ft. clear plastic tubing
5-6 Wine bottles and corks
Labels

For this recipe, you will also need a pot large to dissolve 4 lbs of sugar

Tip: To remove the petals, roll the Dandelion blossom between your thumb and forefinger taking care not to bruise the petals.

Dandelion Wine
Makes approximately one gallon

Ingredients:
1 gallon of Dandelion blossoms (petals only!)
1 gallon of water
1 Lemon
3 Oranges
4 lbs. Sugar
¼ tsp. wine yeast

Place the Dandelion petals in the first fermentation vat. Bring one gallon of water to a boil. Pour over the Dandelion petals. Cover your vat. Let stand undisturbed for three days.

Squeeze the juice of one orange into a cooking pot. Add 4 lbs. of sugar. Heat on low until sugar dissolves and turns into thin syrup. Let cool. While syrup is cooling, slice lemon and oranges and dissolve yeast in a small amount of water. When syrup is less than 100 degrees, stir in yeast. Add syrup to the vat. Add lemon and orange slices, including remaining rind from the orange used to start syrup. This mixture is called “must”.

Cover the vat. Open and stir twice a day for approximate 10 days or until hydrometer reading indicates readiness (see wine making instructions).

Skim solids from must with a large spoon. If necessary, strain must through a fine sieve or cheesecloth to remove small remaining solids. Your must is now in the first stages of wine. Transfer your wine into the secondary fermentation jugs.

Follow the standard wine making process to ferment, rack, clear, bottle, and age your wine.

There are many methods and fancy (some costly) brewery supplies available to the home brewer these days. This article on “Mother Earth News” explains the basics of natural wine making in good detail for the beginner. Costs are minimal with this method so if you decide you would rather just buy a bottle of wine, your investment is insignificant.
To be making your first batch of wine soon, visit YOU CAN MAKE GOOD WINE FOR PENNIES A BOTTLE! on “Mother Earth News” magazine web site.

Oh, and check out the Xombyte by Wdzzz that started it all….
The Dandelion War and The Golden Finch



Comments

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what do you think would be the best bet for a first time wine drinker?please mention the price of the bottle?

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I haven't made wine in my

I haven't made wine in my life.I had a neighbor that had some sort of tree with berries not edible for humans.May  be very good for their health to fly into buildings, windows, cars or other things that might obstruct their flight path while in a drunkard state.Thanks for sharing your blog.<a href="http://www.gocubans.com/cohiba_cuban_cigars.html">Cohiba cigars</a>

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Dandelion Wine in a Ray Bradbury Novel?

Seriously? And it is very good. I still have a couple bottles. Think I'll have to open them soon and see how it tastes after it has aged a few years. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Earn for Your Writing on Xomba Earn for Your Writing on Bukisa Check Out My Writing on Bukisa

Dandelion Wine-yum!

I first heard of dandelion wine in the Ray Bradbury novel. I love the idea of making wine out of something people consider a weed that needs to be destroyed at all costs. When I get a yard I'll definitely have to try this out, it certainly sounds yummy.

Making Wine

I can imagine how much of a mess that was!! In my beginning learning stages, I bottled some mint wine too early and several bottles popped their corks. That was messy enough and is a white wine! Elderberry would have to be 10 times worse! I haven't made wine in a few years now. Last year we noticed a chokecherry bush that had gotten huge. I made a bunch of chokecherry jelly but this year, I just might have to make wine instead. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Earn for Your Writing on Xomba Earn for Your Writing on Bukisa Check Out My Writing on Bukisa

Wine

Liked this! It reminds me of an absolutely classic lady who lived in the house opposite to us when we were growing up. She made wine out of everything - I remember a carrot wine, and a rose petal wine! My mother made a fizzy elderberry wine, we went on holiday and when we got back all the bottles had exploded, pushing the corks out of the tops of the bottles - (the pressure had been that great), there was elderberry fizz everywhere, and much of it had dried into a sticky mess. Check out my Xomba Homepage

Check out my Xomba Homepage

 

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