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Elderflower Champagne! A cool crisp BBQ booze !!!

Elderflower Champagne! A cool crisp BBQ booze !!!
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After seeing this done on a UK cookery programme i gave it a go! couldnt be easier and this instructible will show you how me and my brother went about it step by step making 6 Litres of lovely bubbly booze!

Not only is this my first published instructible but im also entering it in the Summer BBQ competition so lots of feedback and lots of votes please :) What better for your summer BBQ but some home made seasonal, summery, chilled fragrant elderflower champagne!

so as not to be accused of plagiarism the recipe was from here. hats off to Hugh and check out his site for more recipies, cookery books and to read up on his campain ' chicken out' to increase public awareness on battery reared chicken living conditions!

im in the last stage of the process at the mo and will update with pics of the grand opening!

to cover my back... a few obvious points:
-this makes an acoholic brew of unknown strength (probably around 4%) so no underage drinkers!
-the pressurised bottles may well explode so be careful and use common sense

-WARNING- I have just been informed by a much wiser instructabler that elderflowers look very similar to the VERY POISONOUS hemlock plant! make sure you know what you are picking!!! As far as i know the main difference is that elderflowers smell amazing and grow from larger bushes and hemlock (apparently used as an execution method in times BC and added to a brew by the Macbeth witches) has red spotts and marks on its stems. More to come!


 
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Step 1What you will need :

What you will need :
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ok first things first... things you will need. gather em up before picking the elderflowers!

Equipment:
-a Big ol' bucket, (bigger than 6 litres) nice and clean, the one i got was marked safe for food products for extra safety but its up to you.
-lemon juicer and zester
-strainer and a clean tea towel or cheese cloth (for straining)
-enough bottles to fit it all in. make sure they are good thick bottles ideally with a latch type lid. this is gonna be under a lot of pressure and ive heard horror stories of this stuf exploding with messy and potentially dangerous consequenses!
-a way of getting the stuff into the bottles, i used a tube as a syphon but a jug or funnel would do.

ingredients (in UK measurements):
2kg sugar (i know i said 2KG but its actually supposed to be 1)
4 litres hot water and 2 litres of cold
Juice and zest of four lemons (make sure u get unwaxed lemons or ull get waxy scuzz on the top of ur brew)
1-2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
A pinch of dried yeast (you may not need this)
About 24-30 elderflower heads, in full bloom

All in all, pretty cheap ingredients!
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47 comments
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Nov 27, 2010. 12:36 PMblauschmetterling says:
I would think you would want to keep the potion in an airtight container while its fermenting (that is actually the definition of fermentation, it requires an anaerobic environment). In order to keep it from 'splodin' I suggest using an airlock. You can either get one from a gourmet/homebrew store (they're about $1 here in Richmond, VA, so they shouldn't be much more in the UK) or fashion one using a balloon (there are several instructables on this).
Jul 11, 2011. 8:45 AMhornell says:
I checked with a local brewer and if you follow the recipe as described in this instructable, you apparently need oxygen for the wild yeast. He recommended an airlock with a cotton ball jammed in the end to act as a coarse filter.

I currently have two containers fermenting: one which I added the elderflowers to hot water (to kill the wild yeast), added all ingredients and then added champagne yeast with a (water containing) air lock, the other container is being fermented using the method described above.

I will post again with a comparison after they have been bottled and tested.
Jul 22, 2010. 12:27 PMdjsc says:
I had a go at this lately, using Hugh Fearnley-wotsit's recipe. It hadn't fermented out enough when it went into bottles and I now have 'bottle bombs', where fermentation has continued in the bottle, pressurising it to a dangerous level. The smell that comes off them when you open the bottles is amazing, but the unfermented sugar left in mine makes it far too sweet. I would leave it a bit longer than the 6 days he stipulates, or rack it into a demijon first to settle the yeast.
Jul 31, 2010. 5:22 PMdaithiocoinnigh says:
Indeed, as long as the fermentation keeps out nasties and lets out air, 2-3 weeks will produce a more crisp flavour. additionally a hydrometer will provide a scientific method to find out when fermentation has stopped.
Jul 16, 2010. 4:32 AMnieks says:
I seems interesting, but what was the result? From my, not verylarge, knowledge of winemaking and beer brewing it seems that you are bottling this way to fast. It normally takes some time for wild yeast, or normal yeast, to settle in and convert all the sugars, and if you bottle it so soon you might have to watch out for your bottles, indeed, exploding from high pressure. In my opinion, it would be better to wait until all the sugars have been fermented, then bottle it with a few ml's of sugar syrup (1:1 sugar:water) to make sure the gas production won't be over the top.
Nov 9, 2008. 10:35 PMdan moulton says:
Its early summer here in New Zealand and there are heaps of elder flowers out. So i've just brewed up a batch of this. I thought it wasn't going to ferment but its just started bubbling away in my brew barrel. Very exciting! Should be able to bottle in a week or so. If it works out i might have time to do another brew before all the flowers are gone.
May 2, 2010. 5:32 AMpfiddle says:
 Pick the flowers and freeze 'em. DO NOT under any circumstances pick flowers that are dying. You'll end up with a very acidic gloup.

If you can get J.J.Berry's (Bible) on The Home Brewer.
Making mead with ANYthing other than just honey is called melomeal and takes months rather than many many years to be drinkable.
Nov 12, 2008. 11:46 PMdan moulton says:
Nice one, international elderflower wine judge! i'm in Christchurch in the South Island. Feel free to message me if you're passing through.
Nov 2, 2009. 6:42 PMRedneckAsian says:
You need to write how to distinguish elderflowers from the fatally poisonous hemlock
Apr 30, 2010. 3:24 PMAmyLuthien says:
If it's any help . . .

This is Elder:  http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/e/elder-04.html
This is Hemlock: http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/h/hemloc18.html

Note the difference in the leaf shape, the Hemlock is more "fern-like"
Jan 3, 2010. 1:02 PMll.13 says:
Hemlock is a ground plant/weed whereas Elder bushes are small tree / large bush like.

I don't think there's easily confused... if at all. ;)
Mar 23, 2010. 12:27 PMRamDragon says:
Bakers Yeast tends to be several strains of yeast. Different brands give different flavors, and it's hard to control your outcome even using the same brand! But campaign yeast or some other brewers yeast is generally cheap and easy to find.

Looks good! Can't wait for the update.
Mar 16, 2010. 2:54 PMblodefood says:
I am challenged to come up with a family friendly non-alcoholic version.  I guess if you reduce the sugar considerably (say 25 to 50 mL for every finished L?), boil everything in a quarter of the water and then when cool, strain and add one part brew to three parts club soda.  You could put it in a punch bowl for a party and float elder leaves for decoration or you could bottle it that way, but it would need to be used up within a couple of weeks and might be a lot less bubbly.
Mar 20, 2010. 7:18 PMblodefood says:
That's helpful, but I am trying not to make it too sweet.

I like your cocktail suggestions.
Jan 8, 2010. 1:31 PMmannyisdead says:
Nice. I'll try it with mexican sambucus or saúco... hope it works.
Oct 12, 2009. 8:44 PMdavin_x says:
Ok, lets have more info on the box mod (box holder for the bottles)
Oct 14, 2009. 10:44 PMdavin_x says:
Oh yeah I totally got your waste -> wasted comment.

I was however quite interested in the cardboard box bottle holders. Didthose come with the bottle purchase? Any chance you can open it allout and have the drawings so we can reverse engineer it on some waste cardboard?

No Elderflowers here in Asia though!
Oct 19, 2009. 7:12 PMdavin_x says:
Sweet, cant wait for that cardboard carrier instruk-tu-bal (instructables).

I'm looking at making cider here first, at least apples is something we can get easily :D
Sep 20, 2009. 5:32 PMtunneler says:
A few notes which may help out if you're doing this again this year (and I hope you do, this looks AWESOME, wish I had elderflowers in my area). 1. To transfer in a more sanitary way you can rinse your mouth with vodka or other strong spirits beffore sucking BUT the best way is to fill the transfer tube with clean (sanitary) water and keep your thumb over one end so the water doesn't come back out. Put the other end in the bucket, release your thumb and the water will draw the other liquid through the tube...no sucking required. (Catch the water in a third small vessel to aviod watering down our brew) 2. Please be careful using glass bottles given your method of carbonation. The gas pressure WILL shatter glass (or at the very least pop the stoppers and make a huge mess). Put the bottles in the fridge after a week to drastically slow the carbonation process and increase safety.. Better yet, ferment to dry then add a touch of sugar for carbonation as mentioned below
Jul 1, 2009. 3:33 PMPazzerz says:
We used to have deep fried elder flowers. NO, really its delicious! Dipped in a sweet batter and cooked til browned. The flowers themselves have such a sweet taste, you haven't tasted anything like it.
Sep 13, 2008. 1:54 PMBrames says:
We have elderberry bushes here in the states too! Also don't use bakers yeast for brewing, it will give all sorts of off flavors.
Aug 5, 2008. 2:42 PMEsmagamus says:
Does this actually taste good or just green? :P
Jul 16, 2008. 7:14 AMwhiteoakart says:
Wow, I think we have loads of these growing wild here in our back woods place. I have been wondering what they were and if they were edible. Time for a definitive ID. For an extra bonus, the University of Michigan Health Services lists elderberry (black or blue varieties) as beneficial to relieving influenza symptoms and as an excellent source of antioxidants. So, drink to your health!
Jul 16, 2008. 12:44 PMwhiteoakart says:
Woo hoo, I just found some. Too bad most of the flowers are gone. But now I know where to find it next Spring.
Jul 17, 2008. 6:03 AMwhiteoakart says:
Drunk all the time, feelin' fine, on elderberry wine... -elton john
Jul 16, 2008. 7:15 AMwhiteoakart says:
Here is a link to the actual info, if interested:

UM Health Services - Elderberry
Jul 4, 2008. 4:42 PMt.rohner says:
Nice instructable, we just made 60 l of it for a wedding. We bottle it into 750ml champagne bottles, they are tested up to 18 bar and normally burst around 44 bar. (Champagne is pressurized at 3 bar at room temp 20° Celsius) We let it ferment out completely with champagne yeast. We do this, so we can add a defined amount of sugar at bottling time. This way, we have exactly the carbonation(fizz) we want. Since we use crown caps, we can't just open the swing tops to release overpressure. Around here (Switzerland) the elderflower season is during June, if i go up the mountains, i can stretch it another 2 weeks. My sister made it once quite some years ago, her first batch came out delicious, the next were bottle bombs. So i thought, i need some more consistency. Being a homebrewer, i have some knowledge in the field of fermentation. I was able to enhance the process in terms of consistency as outlined above. Regarding alcohol content, i used 8 kg of sugar for 60 liters. I measured around 13° Plato or a gravity of 1.052, this translates to around 5-6% ABV. So it's half the strength of a wine, like strong beer or a cider. Given you drink it from champagne flutes, you need quite some glasses to get yourself pissed.
Jul 1, 2008. 9:39 AMskeptikool says:
Dried elderberries are quite popular among many wine makers. When in Austria I recall enjoying a delicious treat of elderberry blossoms that had been dipped in a batter and had then been deep-fried. They may have been topped off with a sprinkling of sugar and fresh lemon juce. Sadly, I don't know of one elderberry tree locally. They were plentiful the U.K. and, as I recall might even be found in the hedgerows - along with the sloes and crab apples - both favorites of those into wines and jellies. Will check with my local nursery. Am tempted to put an elderberry in, if available.
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