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  • Dandelion Beer

    Its probably been posted before but hey -ho!

    I thought I would give this recipe a try which I've pulled from the net. I'm just interested to see what it tastes like? It appears to be simple to make as well.

    DANDELION BEER
    Apart from being a very popular country tipple, dandelion beer was the drink most favoured in the past by workers in the iron foundries and potteries of England. It is refreshing and particularly good for relieving stomach upsets or indigestion and for clearing the kidneys and bladder.
    Ingredients:
    • 1 quart young dandelion plants
    • 1 lemon
    • 2 teaspoons finely chopped ginger
    • 1 gallon cold water
    • 3 cups light brown sugar
    • 1 tablespoon cream of tartar
    • 1 tablespoon brewer’s yeast

    Instructions:
    1. Wash the plants and remove the hairy roots without breaking the main taproots.
    2. Squeeze the lemon and put the juice aside; peel the rind off the lemon in strips (no pith should be left).
    3. Put the plants into a pail with the ginger, the lemon rind, and the water. Boil for 10 minutes, then strain out the solids.
    4. Put the sugar and cream of tartar in the fermenting vessel and pour the liquid over them. Stir until the sugar is dissolved.
    5. When the liquid is lukewarm, add the yeast and the lemon juice, and leave the vessel, covered with a folded cloth, in a warm room for 5 days.
    6. Strain out all the sediment and bottle in screw-topped cider or beer bottles. This homemade dandelion beer is ready to drink in about a week, when it hisses as the stopper is loosened. It does not keep very long.
    7. Test the bottles daily to see that they don’t get too fizzy. Even after only 2 days in the bottles, the beer is smashing.
    My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
    to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)

    Diversify & prosper



  • #2
    wow that sound great mate ,i might give it a go too ,i have a recipe where you have to take all the petals of each flower and you need at least a carrier bag full of flower heads to make 6 bottles of beer and i didnt fancy that ha ha ,let us know how you get on with it ,cheers and good luck

    p.s. you can also say drinking it is for medisenal purposes
    The Dude abides.

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    • #3
      I made dandelion wine a couple of times
      (with a carrier bag of just petals)

      absolutely lovely taste....a bit like the smell of fresh mown grass.

      The trick (when making the wine at least) is to pick the dandelions before noon on a sunny morning. I'm not sure why this is, but being a curious sort I made two demijons...one in the morning and another in the afternoon...and yes, there was a distinct difference with the morning one tasting much 'cleaner'.
      http://goneplotterin.blogspot.co.uk/

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      • #4
        This thread (and the pure yellow lawn that seemed to happen overnight one day) inspired me to make dandelion wine!

        The demijohn is bubbling away nicely
        Forgive me for my pages of text.

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        • #5
          Silly question. Does the wine have the "pissenlit" effect?

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          • #6
            maybe not en lit, maybe all the time, almost maybe when I was picking the petals but thankfully only almost.
            Forgive me for my pages of text.

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