I hate to write this but it has to be done - "Please don't eat the daisies. Drink them!" Sorry.
Oxeye daisies are probably everywhere. Easy to harvest but just a little time consuming to gather enough.
When I first tasted the greens of the oxeye daisy early in the year there was a very strong balsamic flavor. I read that whatever chemical was responsible for the flavor was present in every cell of the plant. It was delicious and I was really looking forward to a wine.
I used 2 quarts (397 gr) daisies, citric acid, and ec1118 yeast, fermented with the flowers. Transferred a few days ago.
Very yellow! Slightest balsamic hint, easy to miss. But this is what surprised me - 1118 isn't known for fruity esters like 71B but this tastes like a fruit wine. I would bet money it's a fruit wine and not flower...a fruit you can't quite identify. It's way too early for any kind of judgement but right now it's delicious.
I may have to harvest and freeze more flowers just in case.
Oxeye daisies are probably everywhere. Easy to harvest but just a little time consuming to gather enough.
When I first tasted the greens of the oxeye daisy early in the year there was a very strong balsamic flavor. I read that whatever chemical was responsible for the flavor was present in every cell of the plant. It was delicious and I was really looking forward to a wine.
I used 2 quarts (397 gr) daisies, citric acid, and ec1118 yeast, fermented with the flowers. Transferred a few days ago.
Very yellow! Slightest balsamic hint, easy to miss. But this is what surprised me - 1118 isn't known for fruity esters like 71B but this tastes like a fruit wine. I would bet money it's a fruit wine and not flower...a fruit you can't quite identify. It's way too early for any kind of judgement but right now it's delicious.
I may have to harvest and freeze more flowers just in case.
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