I haven't done anything unusual for a while and it's certainly the right time of year for bramble tips. Had a couple surprises along the way as well.
Wild blackberries are invasive on my property. Certainly can't get rid of them. Control them? Barely.
Picking a gallon+ of tips didn't take long. The 3-5 inches of new growth snaps off easily and the thorns aren't developed yet. In other words, no pain.
There are many recipes out there and the main difference is in the preparation of the tips. Some boiled for 15 minutes, some an hour. Some strain immediately, some steep a bit. I went with CJJ Berry's version - boiled water poured over tips, steep overnight, simmer for 15ish minutes the next day, let it cool a bit and strain.
Which brings me to Surprise #1 - the first ingredient I added, once cooled and strained, was sugar. And it foamed instantly! Never had that happen before. Hey @Rice_Guy, any idea why?
Transferred to secondary this morning which leads to Surprise #2 - the color. I wasn't expecting such a vibrant color.
The aroma was a nice generic wine. There was a bit of bitterness which I attribute to the long processing time. I had enough left over to sweeten and the bitterness vanished.
When I started this I was curious - last year I made a vine wine with leaves and tendrils from a Catawba grape vine and it astonishingly tasted as though it were made with Catawba grapes. Would this have any blackberry flavor, I wondered.
Which leads to Surprise #3 - YES! And sweetening made the blackberry flavor really pop!
Happy so far!
Wild blackberries are invasive on my property. Certainly can't get rid of them. Control them? Barely.
Picking a gallon+ of tips didn't take long. The 3-5 inches of new growth snaps off easily and the thorns aren't developed yet. In other words, no pain.
There are many recipes out there and the main difference is in the preparation of the tips. Some boiled for 15 minutes, some an hour. Some strain immediately, some steep a bit. I went with CJJ Berry's version - boiled water poured over tips, steep overnight, simmer for 15ish minutes the next day, let it cool a bit and strain.
Which brings me to Surprise #1 - the first ingredient I added, once cooled and strained, was sugar. And it foamed instantly! Never had that happen before. Hey @Rice_Guy, any idea why?
Transferred to secondary this morning which leads to Surprise #2 - the color. I wasn't expecting such a vibrant color.
The aroma was a nice generic wine. There was a bit of bitterness which I attribute to the long processing time. I had enough left over to sweeten and the bitterness vanished.
When I started this I was curious - last year I made a vine wine with leaves and tendrils from a Catawba grape vine and it astonishingly tasted as though it were made with Catawba grapes. Would this have any blackberry flavor, I wondered.
Which leads to Surprise #3 - YES! And sweetening made the blackberry flavor really pop!
Happy so far!