Cut Out + Keep

Sloe Gin

They are not for eating, but who cares when you can make the wonderful liqueur, sloe gin?

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/sloe-gin • Posted by FW Media

There is nothing like the excitement of scrabbling about in hedgerows and screaming ‘stop the car!’ during the sloe season. These fruits look a bit like blueberries but actually are quite hard, have stones and are in the plum family. They ripen in late autumn. They are not for eating, but who cares when you can make the wonderful liqueur, sloe gin?

You will need

Project Budget
Almost Nothing

Time

0 h 30

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
Medium screen shot 2012 10 10 at 17.25.27 Medium screen shot 2012 10 10 at 17.25.15

Description

There is nothing like the excitement of scrabbling about in hedgerows and screaming ‘stop the car!’ during the sloe season. These fruits look a bit like blueberries but actually are quite hard, have stones and are in the plum family. They ripen in late autumn. They are not for eating, but who cares when you can make the wonderful liqueur, sloe gin?

Instructions

  1. Picking sloes Experts advise picking sloes after the first frost, but you risk there being none left if you wait too long. Frost helps soften the fruit and split it, avoiding the need to prick the sloes before starting the gin. You can put them in a freezer bag in the freezer for a few days, but the pricking process is all part of the fun. Sloes are ripe when they are a deep blueberry colour and have a frosty opacity. When you squeeze them they should be a bit soft – you don’t want bullets.

  2. Making the sloe gin If the frost hasn’t done it for you, prick each sloe twice with a darning needle, then put them into a clean wine bottle. When it is half full, add 75–115g (2¾ –4oz) of sugar depending how sweet you like it. Fill up the bottle with gin. Any old gin will do – a supermarket own label 37.5 per cent proof gin will do just fine. Make sure the screw-cap or cork is pushed in securely and give it a good shake to disperse the sugar. Shake the bottle several times over the next week, as the sugar sinks to the bottom. When the sugar is finally dissolved, stick the gin away in a dark cupboard and leave it alone.

  3. When will it be ready? Give it a year – or at least six months. It tastes even better after a year or more. Have a sip after several months to check the sweetness and if it is too sharp add some more sugar and keep shaking for a few days, then stick it back in the cupboard. When it tastes about right, strain it through a bit of muslin (cheesecloth) and dispose of the sloes. They will have imparted the beautiful rose pink colour that characterizes this delicious drink. Label each bottle with the date and where you found the sloes. Sloe gin is delicious, if lethal. Your head might not thank you the next day, but you will surely get hooked on the ritual.