K&GB said:Joan,
Looks wonderful. I may have missed this from another post thread, but did you use one of the recipes on Jack Keller's website? If so, which one? The dandelions are out in force here in Arizona.
I think this may have come from Jack Keller's site but I can't remember!! Damn, I'm getting old! I used it because I had all the ingredients!
<h3 style="text-indent: 0.25in;">Dandelion Wine </span></h3>
<ul ="disc"><li ="Msonormal" style="">6-8 cups dandelion flowers, trimmed </span></span><li ="Msonormal" style="">3 lbs granulated sugar </span><li ="Msonormal" style="">1 gallon water </span><li ="Msonormal" style="">3 tsps acid blend </span><li ="Msonormal" style="">¼ tsp tannin </span><li ="Msonormal" style="">1 tsp yeast nutrient </span><li ="Msonormal" style=""><st1:State wt="on"><st1lace wt="on">Champagne</span></st1lace></st1:State> or Montrachet wine yeast </span>[/list]
Wash flowers and trim off all
greenery, using petals only. Put petals in 1½-quart pan and cover with 1 quart
water. Bring to simmer for 10 minutes, then put lid on pan and turn off heat.
Let steep for 1-6 hours, depending on how strong you want the flavor to be.
Meanwhile, boil remaining water and dissolve sugar, acid blend, yeast nutrient,
and tannin. Strain dandelion petals through nylon straining bag and squeeze bag
to extract all liquid. Combine dandelion-water and remaining ingredients
(except yeast) in primary and cover. When cooled to room temperature, add
activated yeast. Ferment 3-5 days (until specific gravity is 1.020), then rack
to secondary and attach airlock. After 30 additional days, rack, top up and
reattach airlock. Set aside 3 months, then rack, top up and reattach airlock.
Repeat after additional 3 months and add stabilizer. Wait 30 days and bottle.
Cellar this wine for a year before drinking. Best served chilled. [Adapted
recipe from Terry Garey's The Joy of Home Winemaking]</span>