nattyMatty Posted May 14, 2008 Report Share Posted May 14, 2008 LILACSLilac is the name given to any of the plants of the genus Syringa -- especially Syringa vulgaris. These are shrubs that produce clusters of small, fragrant, purplish or white flowers. The small flowers must be picked off the stems to make the wine. Flowers can be picked and frozen in ZipLoc bags for later use. This wine is not only delicious, but its bouquet will be appreciated as soon as you open a bottle. Indeed, George Leonard Herter, in his 1965 book How to Make the Finest Wines at Home, calls lilac wine "...one of the best tasting wines possible to make."LILAC WINE (1)3-1/2 quarts lilac flowers 2-1/2 lb granulated sugar 2 lemons or 12 grams 80% lactic acid 7-1/2 pts water 1 tsp yeast nutrient Champagne yeast Put water on to boil while culling through and rinsing flowers. Put flowers in primary and when water boils pour over flowers. Cover primary tightly and set aside for 48 hours. Strain flowers through nylon straining bag and squeeze to extract all flavor, then discard pulp. Stir sugar, yeast nutrient, juice of lemon or lactic acid into primary and stir until completely dissolved. Sprinkle dry yeast on top without stirring or add activated yeast culture to primary. Recover primary and ferment 7 days. Transfer liquid to secondary and fit airlock. Ferment 30 days and rack, top up and refit airlock. Rack again every 30 days until wine is clear and no longer dropping sediment. Rack into bottles and allow to age 3-6 months. [Adapted from George Leonard Herter's How to Make the Finest Wines at Home] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nattyMatty Posted May 14, 2008 Author Report Share Posted May 14, 2008 Bumap Yaa~ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ol'Hickster Posted May 14, 2008 Report Share Posted May 14, 2008 I have a recipe pretty much identical to that but with Dandiloins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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