The Cottage Smallholder


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Two recipes: Wild Damson Gin and Sloe Gin recipes

Photo of a bowl of wid damsons

Wild damsons are a beautiful rich dark colour


Unlike sloes, wild damsons are hard to find. For every thirty wild plum trees there may be just one wild damson tree. When I spot wild damsons in the hedgerows, they are harvested into a special bag.

These, and the diminutive bullace, are the kings of hedgerow fruit. These tiny fruit make such an irresistible liqueur that overnight guests have actually turned down Danny’s famous cooked breakfast, and gone back to bed to sleep off the excesses of the night before.

Our damson and sloe gin is not the thick ultra sweet variety. We prefer the sugar to enhance rather than shield the flavour. Every three months or so it’s sampled and, if necessary, topped up with sugar. Usually no extra sugar is needed.

We try to keep our damson and sloe gin well away from the drinks tray! Each year we make a lot of fruit gin and vodka (more recipes to follow, in time). Sloe gin is the big craze at the moment around here, as sloes are more plentiful.

Here are our recipes for both. We are also starting experimenting with sloe gin see this post for details

Tips and tricks:

  • Make more than you need the first year, so you can compare different vintages. This liqueur does improve over time.
  • Some people drain the grog through muslin after a couple of months, to clarify the liqueur and bottle. We don’t bother as one old soak tipped that, once the gin is drunk, you can pour medium sherry on the fruit and start all over again! The latter is devilish and drinkable within three months. We have a recipe for this in our wine and gin section.
  • Keep your fruit gin away from the light as this will maintain the colour. Unless it is in a dark green or brown bottle. Wrapping it in brown parcel paper will keep out the light.
  • Make notes on a label of your fruit gin/vodka /sugar ratio and stick it onto the bottle(s) so that you have a record, if you make a particularly good batch. We note our responses as the grog matures. Yucky after sixth months can be to die for in a year (you will probably not remember without notes). Notes seem boring when you are making the grog but they are so worthwhile when you start again the next year. It won’t be long before you will get a feel of what works well for your taste (and the notes will come into their own).
  • Adding almond essence to sloe gin lifts it from good to great. I haven’t tried this with the damson gin but return in a years’ time for our review.
  • Don’t kill the liqueur with too much sugar at the start. Use the amount above to start your sloe or damson gin and then every couple of months take a tiny sip. At this time add more sugar if it is too sharp for your taste.
  • Gin v Vodka? Vodka can be used as the spirit for these recipes. Although I’m a vodka drinker, we tend to stick to a gin base for our fruit liqueurs.
  • A good damson gin can be made from ordinary damsons available in the shops. As they are bigger you would need to put them into a larger Le Parfait jar (I’d use a 2 litre size).
  • People have been picking sloes from September 1st around here. Some people say that you shouldn’t pick sloes until after the first frost. This can be circumvented by putting your sloes in the freezer overnight. We don’t bother with either method and always have great results.
  • This year we have made up a number of small (1lb honey jars) of sloe gin to give as Christmas presents.

 

Wild Damson Gin and sloe gin Recipes
Recipe Type: Liqueurs
Prep time: 15 mins
Total time: 15 mins
Ingredients
  • Wild damson gin:
  • 1lb/454gm of washed wild damsons
  • 6 ozs/168gm of white granulated sugar
  • 75cl bottle of medium quality gin
  • Sterilised 1 litre (at least) Le Parfait jar or wide necked bottle with stopper/cork
  • Sloe Gin:
  • 1lb/454gm of washed sloes
  • 4 ozs/112gm of white granulated sugar
  • 75cl bottle of medium quality gin
  • Sterilised 1 litre (at least) Le Parfait jar or wide necked bottle
  • 1-2 drops of almond essence
Instructions
  1. Wild damson gin:
  2. Wash damsons well and discard any bad or bruised fruit. Prick fruit several times with a fork and place damsons in either a large
  3. Kilner/Le Parfait jar or a wide necked 1 litre bottle.
  4. Using a funnel, add the sugar and top up with gin to the rim.
  5. Shake every day until the sugar is dissolved and then store in a cool, dark place until you can resist it no longer (leave for at least three months, we usually let it mature for a year). If you are planning to drink this after 3 months, have a nip afetr a month, and top up with sugar to taste.
  6. Some people strain the grog (through muslin/jelly bag) after 3 months and bottle it, leaving it mature for six months. We strain and bottle after a year. Don’t leave the straining process any longer than a year; leaving the fruit in too long can spoil the liqueur, as we found to our cost one year.
  7. Sloe gin:
  8. Wash sloes well and discard any bruised or rotten fruit. Prick fruit several times with a fork and place sloes in either a large Kilner/Le Parfait jar or a wide necked 1 litre bottle. I put several sloes in my palm to prick them rather than picking them up one by one.
  9. Using a funnel, add the sugar and top up with gin to the rim. Always open sugar bags over the sink as sugar tends to get caught in the folds at the top of the bag.
  10. Add the almond essence.
  11. Shake every day until the sugar is dissolved and then store in a cool, dark place until you can resist it no longer (leave for at least three months, we usually let it mature for a year).
  12. Some people strain the grog (through muslin/jelly bag) after 3 months and bottle it, leaving it mature for six months. We strain and bottle after a year.

  Leave a reply

713 Comments

  1. thanks for info great site

  2. Hi
    I was wondering if you could give me some advice. I have some sloes in the freezer I picked this time last year (I found loads and didn’t make sloe gin with all of them), and was hoping to use them to make some sloe gin this year. Do you think they will still be ok to use?
    many thanks,
    Abbie

  3. Fiona Nevile

    HI Rob

    How disappointing. It’s the same around here. Plums and sloes are thin on the bush but apples are weighing down the branches of our trees. It has to be a cider year!

    If you find any more, try using vodka as your spirit it makes for a cleaner, sharper tasting grog.

  4. I have been looking for sloes this year and have found none. I usualy pick 3-4lbs off 8 – 10 bushes every year but not a berry this year.
    I have managedto pick 2lds of wild damsons,but these are low yealding thisyear.
    I have botteled two lots with gin,hope it’s as good as sloes?????

  5. Thanks, fn, for your reply. The filtering will take care of it, looks like. Well, I’ll try it and see what happens!

  6. I’ve seen it mentioned a few times so I’ve started two bottles of elderberry vodka this evening. I went and picked loads of them this afternoon. It would have been elderberry gin except the local store had run out!

    I’ll let you know how it goes after Christmas.

  7. This is the first year that i have made damson and sloe gin, your site is very informative. Thankyou very much and i will let you know how they both turn out. The sloe gin is for a Christmans present for the father in law so i hope it turns out well. Just need to find a nice bottle to put it in. Thanks again.

  8. I live in Somerset. Can anybody tell me where I can get some Damsons. There just doesn’t seem to be any about. I always make Damson Gin and my friends will have withdrawal symptoms if they don’t get their usual bottle at Christmas!

  9. I was wondering if anyone could tell me where I can get some damsons from in the Oldham area of Lancashire? our local market says he wont ‘be having any this year because of a bad crop… I can’t believe it! I make a lovely Damson jam and have none in reserve.
    Thankyou for reading
    Monique

  10. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Betsy

    This question is impossible to answer.

    And there may have been no bugs on the fruit before you froze it.

    When the fruit unfreezes there will be lots of juice. You could filter this through muslin. The freezing will have killed any bugs.

    It’s always best to filter your damson gin through muslin after six months, when it’s ready to drink.

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