It’s a Sloe Time of Year … make Slow Gin
In this post ...
… at least it is in Cornwall where, I suppose, things come into season earlier than they do Up North. People are out stripping sloes from the bushes even as I speak and I can’t say I blame them; to my mind Sloe Gin is the very best possible use not only for gin, which I dislike, but indubitably for sloes too as they are yuk to eat!
Many people insist that sloes shouldn’t be picked until there has been a frost but if you wait that long you are in danger of someone less patient having already picked the berries and, in any case, we can’t rely on getting a frost down here!
One way round this problem is to freeze them yourself before thawing and using them, another is to prick each sloe with a clean darning needle! Do people still have such things?
Sloe Gin
500g sloes, washed
250g sugar
1 ltr gin
~ Prick or freeze and thaw your sloes and put them into a large sterilised jar – a Kilner or similar.
~ Add the sugar and the gin.
~ Seal tightly.
~ Put in a cool, dark place and give it a viddy sherrek (Cornish for good shake) every day until you can discern that the sugar has completely dissolved.
~ Leave it alone for as long as you can – a few months at least, but apparently the longer it sits the better it is and we are talking years here.
Incidentally – if by some strange chance you don’t have scales then sloes weigh about 2g so count 250 of them and you should be OK!
There, that wasn’t difficult was it, apart from the waiting bit. The trick is to make some every year so that you have some by. Here is a bottle I have just started from last year’s batch.
I seem to have stored it an inappropriate whisky bottle, I can’t remember why.
Sloe gin has a lovely rich sweet flavour, undisturbed by the original juniper taste of the gin and is a kind of autumnal Rumpot and is perfectly delish on its own. Some people who like messing with nature have come up with a number of cocktails using it, however, including one called the Hermione Granger containing pomegranate liqueur, grapefruit juice and Champagne!
Sloe Gin Fizz
Shake sloe gin together with a quarter as much lemon juice and a little of sugar. Strain into a chilled glass and top up with sparkling soda water. Try to do this last bit as violently as possible to encourage the fizz.
3 More Ideas for Sloe Gin
1. Top up with Champers, which works very well as sloe gin is quite similar to Cassis.
2. I haven’t tried it yet but I think a G & T made with sloe gin might be far more palatable to me than the original drink.
3. I have however tried adding a modicum of Sloe Gin to the pan juices after cooking duck to make a lovely pan sauce and it worked very well!
Suzy Bowler
Having been a somewhat itinerant chef for over 30 years I was amazed, on my return to the UK, at the blatant food waste that now seems to be rife in the country; amazed and irritated. So much so that I decided to start a blog about spontaneous cooking from leftovers to show people that there are great alternatives to throwing food away.
2 Comments
ajay
great post
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Jenny Eatwell
That's it, I shall have to send my menfolk out hunting and gathering. That's the only thing to do! I've never made Sloe Gin, but have often talked about it – now is the time for action! lol