
Last year's
sloe gin has been steeping for ten months now - it's time to decant. I found these pretty bottles at
Lakeland (where they're marketed especially for sloe gin), and filled four of them from last year's Rumtopf.
I'll be able to start collecting sloes, hopefully, some time next month. A quick recap - pick sloes after the first frost, prick them all over with a needle and for every pound of sloes you collect, pour over 8 oz of caster sugar and 1 ¾ pints of gin, then seal. You can leave the gin for as little as two months to steep, agitating the container occasionally, but the longer you leave it, the smoother the results will be.

I've had a few emails asking what a sloe bush looks like and where to find one, so I went down to the woods today (no big surprises) and took some pictures. The sloe is the fruit of the blackthorn bush, and you'll often find them making up part of a hedgerow, or growing near the edge of a field. If you don't live in the countryside, don't despair - blackthorn can be found in scrubby land in towns, and is often planted in parks. Most of England's public footpaths will have at least one sloe bush on its route, and a very pleasant afternoon can be spent foraging the hedgerows for a carrier-bag full.

The blackthorn bush grows to between 3 and 13 feet tall. If you have sharp eyes, you can identify the bush in the spring by its froth of white flowers and remember where it is for later in the year. Although the fruits here look purple and delicious, they're not ready yet (September 1) - you really need to pick them after a frost, which gives them time to ripen, softens their astringency and makes them easier to prick. If, as happened last year, the frosts just aren't happening, pick in November and put them in the freezer.

The sloes are nearly spherical and grow close to the branch. A raw sloe is a particularly disgusting beast - it's sharp and astringent. It will make your tongue shrivel and your teeth squeak. These purple fruits are not sloes (compare with the picture above) - they're wild plums, which ripen earlier, have longer stems, are soft to the touch and are sweetly delicious. If in doubt, have a nibble. If it's delicious, it's a plum. If it's like sucking a fruity deodorant stick, it's a sloe. The gin takes on all the fruit's best characteristics, and none of the astringency.
Sloe gin is deliciously versatile. Try pepping up unremarkable Cava with a splash, drink it neat, use it in a martini or add some to
mulled wine. I'll be making another batch next month...until then, cheers!
33 Comments:
Can I come sloe-hunting when you go? I don't think there are many bushes in central Cambridge...
By the way, my dad makes his gin with damsons (no sloes in Lancashire either, evidently). It's very good that way too and you use the same quantities as for Sloe gin.
Well, I don't think it's at all important to wait for a frost before you pick your sloes; this year my favourite tree is already showing a high number of shrivelled, raisiny fruits, and so I picked in mid September and the results look very nice already. Iona: I live near Cambridge, and I'm sure a walk round any nearby hedgerow will find plenty of sloes. Haven't tried it, but there must be hundreds at Wandlebury! Or try the fringes of the sports fields off Long Road.
Hi - I just picked some sloes today near Stanton Drew, Somerset. It's only the start of October, but a few of them were already a bit shrivelled. I don't wait for the frosts either.
Hello, I'm new to your blog :-)
We went and picked a bunch of sloes (34 pounds to be exact!) at the weekend (on the golf course at Longstanton).
What do you recommend with regard to sugar quantities? We've heard anything from 2oz to 1lb per pound of sloes/pint of gin!
Anyways, I look forward to more local info :-)
Hello! For every pound of sloes I use 8 oz of caster sugar and 1 3/4 pints of gin. (Last year's gin-making post is here. I suspect the frosts are going to be too late again this year (although there are still bushes heavy with sloes, which aren't shrivelled here yet, as of October 11), so I picked mine at the weekend too and bunged them in the freezer.
Hi
I found your recipe for sloe gin when I was looking for a toffee apple recipe.
Does anyone know the Halifax area and where I might find sloes to pick during half term?
Hi.
We are in mid wales and have thousands of what we believe to be sloe bushes.
We gathered a few pounds the other day and just wanted to check whether there are any bushes or berries that look like sloes that are poisonous.
Thanks
Phil
Hi Phil
No - there's nothing poisonous that looks similar (although some wild plums, such as damsons, look rather like sloes, only larger). Enjoy your gin!
How long do you put them in the freezer for? Until they are totally frozen or just 10 mins to chill?
Hi Anon - you'll need to freeze them thoroughly (not that this is a problem - it's fun to keep some in there to turn into sloe gin later in the year too, so you can have a kind of production line going). See the first sloe gin post in this pair for more details.
I used to live in Little Downham near Ely and there are lots of hedgerows there filled with sloes. It might be worth a trip out if you live near Cambridge. Not much going on in Little Downham itself but Ely is worth a visit.
A bit late for this year, but raspberry gin is spectacularly delicious. Wild raspberries usually give a better result than the ones you buy in supermarkets. Recipe - about a pound (half kilo) of raspberries, a few tablespoons of sugar (you can add more later if the result isn't sweet enough) and a bottle of gin. Put the rasperries into a wide necked container (a two litre bottle is about the right size, but get something with a wide neck if you can). Add the sugar. Shake until the raspberries are broken up a bit. Add gin. Put the top on the container. Shake daily (or whenever you remember) until November. Leave to settle. Decant the delicious red rasperry gin into a nice bottle. Don't throw the rasps out, put them onto a meringue or some icecream and have them as a treat (but don't drive afterwards!)
5 Sep 2007: Cambridge Sloe Update: Back of longstanton golf course is pretty bare this year. No bushes along the side of the river, either, all the way up to the railway bridge. Tomorrow trying the Grantchester Grind and seeing if there are any there. The ones that I've seen, however, are ready...
Good grief, Cambridge/shire is full of sloes!
Try along the (Longstanton, for instance?) stretches of disused railway lines, while you can. I'm sure all those fluffy white blossoms alaong the road towards Willingham are also sloes (blackthorn).
I'm told that here in Waterbeach there are masses of them, too, but haven't had the time or inclination to investigate, though I have been given bags full to pass on.
I can't stand gin.
What makes a good, drinkable alternative?
It's been a great year for sloes - the wet summer and warm spring has meant there are tonnes of the things weighing the bushes down at the moment, so get out there while you can!
If you don't like gin, vodka works equally well - you can also make a lovely drink following these instructions but using brandy instead.
there are sloes in the hedgerow along the path from asda to york street near, central cambridge (beehive) although I've got a lot of them!
also along, milton railway line (disued), for which you take the number 1 citibus to CRC college, and turn right along the railway which runs parallell with the science park- it's a fantastic walk along there in the late summer, but this time of year there are a lot of greengages, apples, sloes, rosehips and so on, and it's not bad for blackberries usually, but a bit spidery! good luckx
I have read that after washing your sloes, pop them onto a tray & stand them in the freezer until they are white all over to mimic a frost
Chris Houghton
Greetings everyone..Off to hunt for some sloes but wondered if anyone might be able to point me towards some locations in Somerset, I live near Wells and am prepared to travel.
Thanks ever so!
Has any tried using the gin soaked fruit after decanting? Try roasting some hazelnuts, chopping them to a smallish size, chopping chunks off the ginny sloes and then melting 70% cocoa solids chocolate and mixing in the sloes and nuts. Spread out, cool, cut into bits and try to stop nibbling them! Waste not, want not!
Chriss
Hi, Please can anyone in North Lincolnshire, especially Barton upon Humber area, help me with some sloe bushes? I've walked miles of hedgerow and found nothing. I've asked folks who I know make sloe gin, but the answer always seems to be the same - a kind of polite "find your own!" so maybe they are not so plentiful around here, otherwise I am sure that the information would be forthcoming. Thanks in anticipation of your help. Regards, Gordon
I live in Glasgow and was wondering if anyone knew where I could find sloes in this area? Have car, so can drive if it's a distance. Can anyone help??
Does anyone know where I can find sloes in my area? Distance isn't a problem as I have a car.
Sorry I forgot to mention I live in Telford.
Hi, I live near Haworth, West Yorkshire. Could anyone tell me where I could find some sloes. Thanks.
hi i live incheesterfield near sheffield and was woundering if any one has picked some from round here as i cant seem to find any cheers eddy
Hi,
I live in York and was hoping to make sloe gin for our wedding!! Does anyone know where the sloes are in this part of the world??
kept an eye on a few bushes earlier this year .. unfortunately the farmers have shredded them with the hedge cutting attachments on the tractors.
so off to hunt some more down at away from the main roads.
I didn't think you need to freeze the sloe's, it was just an indication in the past as to the time of year when they would be more palatable.
please comment if I'm wrong ...
steve
Sorry Steve - you're wrong. ;) You'll find a distinct difference in fruitiness and roundness between sloes which have been frozen and sloes which haven't - try making a control bottle of non-frozen ones alongside sloes you've frozen and you'll be able to taste the difference. I think it has to do with the way that freezing breaks down the cell walls, although I'm sure there are people who know more about the inner workings of sloes out there who can tell you more!
I would like to know if anyone has made jam or jelly from the sloe. Please contact me with your comments at annorr@helix.nih. Thanks, Ann
the pricking business is a bore and does little to enhance the final effect, provided the soles are ready when picked. Just leave it a bit longer before bottling!
Hi
anyone looking for sloes in the Cambridge area should try Royston common... go right to the top and follow the foopath off the common through the fields.
I have had 2 years of successful sloe collecting from there resulting in 10+ litres of gin per year. Sadly a have moved away now so will have to look elsewhere.
Pricking so many sloes is a pain so I just put them in a thick plastic bag and gently bash them with a "heavy implement". When I first made SG I was told you had to leave it in the dark and turn the jar every week. This seemed a bit of a bore so now I just leave it in the boot of the car where it stays in the dark and gets jiggled nicely.
By the by, down here in Devon we drink Heart-Starter for elevenses when shooting. Sloe Gin and cheap Fizz. It does what it says on the tin.
Hi Anthony - although I've never bothered keeping mine in the dark, frequent jiggling is an excellent idea, and jiggling in the boot of the car is near genius. Thank you!
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