A bit of work for the urban hippie

Well it has been a busy weekend to say the least, lots done, lots still to do and there will be posts on that next week.

As I emptied the latest load of wood for the hugel bed I am building at the moment it is 11:00pm and I was wondering to myself why am I doing this again? I had just bottled 18 liters of elderflower champagne having finished sorting out an area for Andrea’s new bee hive all afternoon and finishing things in the garden.

All I wanted to do was collapse into bed.

I am reminded of the upbringing I had and how local farmers up country would work through the night as required. I remember my father getting up in lambing season and working as required dependent on the season.

Make hay while the sun shines is a fine old saying for this but it hides the fact that ‘work you guts out as it needs to be done’ is what it really says.

I enjoy the urban hippie lifestyle and I am/have been considering a life change to increase this. If this happens then this sort of thing will be the norm for me no doubt and it is something that I need to think about. I am sure I will go for it at the end of the day I but it is perhaps something to remember in the romantic dreams many have of simpler times and lives that there will be a lot of work to do.

At the end of the day I did get a very, very nice drop of elderflower champagne to while away my typing.

(yes I will post the bottling process tomorrow as part 3)

Have a great week all no matter what you are doing.

Elderflower Champagne (Part 1)

For the last 3 years I have made up batches of elderflower champagne and beer. First year was spectacular, second year ok. Last year I had a burst of 30 degree days that blew up a bunch of my bottles but what was left was fantastic.

On the weekend I noticed that the local elderflower flowers where starting to get to the point where they were ready for making a batch of elderflower champagne. So on the Sunday morning which is the best time to pick them I ducked out nice and early and grabbed about 50 elderflower heads which took me about 10 minutes.

50 heads makes up around 20 liters which is what I base most of my brewing on as I have this size food grade bucket. So I sterilised the 20 liter bucket I use for bucket brewing added hot water and couple of kg of white sugar and just for something different half a kilogram of brown sugar to add a slightly different flavour.

In goes some white wine vinegar

My daughter watched as I removed as much stem as possible to reduce bitterness just leaving mostly flowers.

My parents where down on Friday so I got a nice big bag of lemons which was timely. Cut up the equivalent of 8 big lemons. Juiced them and dropped the juiced lemons in as well. A lot of recipes recommend that you zest the lemon but this is very much bucket brewing and I have tried both ways and can see no difference in taste so I take the easy way out.

 

Wait till the water is around body temperature and add the elderflowers.

Stir through with a sterilised spoon (always use some boiling water to sterilise anything you use in this process including knifes and chopping boards, if you put down a spoon sterilise it again before reuse)

Cover with a clean tea towel or other cloth and stir every morning or night (remember to sterilise the spoon each time)

I have left it in a warm spot in the kitchen (it smells great) and I will check it in a few days and If it is not bubbling from natural yeast fermenting I will add some champagne yeast to it.(more posts to follow up to bottling and of course tasting)

I am going to add some more bucket brewing stuff over this summer now it is warm enough to brew again. It seems odd but you can turn out some good brews with a plastic bucket but the biggest trick is sterilise sterilise sterilise everything you use.

Ingredients

  • 40 – 50 elderflower heads picked either early in the morning or at dusk (morning is best)
  • 2 kg of white sugar
  • ½ kg of brown sugar (optional)
  • 8 table spoons of white wine vinegar
  • Equivalent of 8 – 10 lemons juiced and then juice and lemon thrown in
  • Yeast if it does not start to bubble after 2 or so days (I use ale or champagne yeast)