Proverbs 31 Homestead: How to Make Dandelion Wine - A Recipe for Making it the Easy Way! (2024)

Dandelion wine has been around for about as long as there have been dandelions and wine making - so it's no surprise there are about a gazillion ways to create it. However, most recipes use very large quantities and call for removing the petals from the dandelion flowers. This recipe is different. Not only is the quantity small (about enough to fill a gallon jug), but it saves a ton of time because you don't need to remove the petals from the flowers. The process is also about as simple as you can get, making it a great choice for beginning wine makers.

A Few Notes on Making Easy Dandelion Wine:

* Be sure to collect dandelions you are 100% sure have not been exposed to chemicals (like weed killers).

* Collect only dandelion flowers. It's fine to keep the green leaves (sepals) at the base of the petals, but don't include any stems.

* Choose only fully opened, fresh flowers. Avoid partially-opened blooms or blooms that are wilted or are turning brown.

* It's fine to freeze dandelion flowers until you have enough to make wine. However, measure the flowers before you freeze them, not after.

* Use wine or champagne yeast or your wine will end up way, way too sweet. Regular baking yeast dies before it can fully eat up the sugar in this recipe. Wine or champagne yeast lives longer, and eats up more of the sugar.

* You'll need something to help you cap or cork your bottles. The easiest and cheapest is a bottle caper and caps, like this one.

Dandelion Wine Recipe

8 cups dandelion flowers
1 gallon boiling water
9 cups granulated sugar (you can experiment by using less)
juice from 4 oranges
juice from 3 lemons
2 1/4 teaspoons (1 packet) wine or champagne yeast
1/2 cup lukewarm water

Large, non-reactive pot with lid
Mixing spoon
Colander
Small bowl
Funnel (I used a new, never used car oil funnel)
1 gallon glass jug
Balloon
Fine mesh strainer
Wine or beer bottles with new corks or caps

How to Make Dandelion Wine, the Easy Way:

1. Pour the dandelion heads into a large, non-reactive pot. Pour 1 gallon of boiling water over the flowers. Cover with the pot lid and steep for two days.

After two days, it will look like this:

2. Place a colander over a large bowl and strain the flower mixture. Reserve the liquid, but discard the dandelion flowers.


3. Clean the pot so no trace of dandelions remains. Pour the liquid into the pot. Stir in the sugar and citrus juice.

4. In a small bowl, dissolve the yeast into the lukewarm water, stirring a couple of times to combine.

5. Pour the yeast mixture into the dandelion mixture and stir until sugar is completely dissolved.

6. Place the funnel in the jug and pour the liquid into it.

Cover the opening of the jug with a balloon, to prevent bugs, dust, etc. from getting into the wine. Store in a dark location until the mixture stops fermenting.

7. Keep an eye on the balloon for a few days. If it grows quite large, lift up part of the balloon end, releasing the gas. After about 5 weeks, the balloon will probably be only slightly inflated. Release the gas from it periodically; when the balloon stays deflated for one or two days, the wine is done fermenting and is ready to bottle. (Don't bottle before this time, or you risk having your bottles of wine explode!)

8. Strain through cheesecloth until you are satisfied with the clarity of the wine. Funnel into bottles and cork or cap. For best flavor, allow the wine to sit in a dark, cool location for at least 6 months. As the wine ages, it will become lighter in color.

I can't show you my dandelion wine all bottled up yet, because it is at the final stages of fermenting. But once it's bottled and aged, it should look something like this:

You May Also Be Interested In:

Proverbs 31 Homestead: How to Make Dandelion Wine - A Recipe for Making it the Easy Way! (8)Proverbs 31 Homestead: How to Make Dandelion Wine - A Recipe for Making it the Easy Way! (9)




For more information about harvesting and using dandelions, see these posts:

"Ah Sweet...Dandelions?" (including a recipe for cooking dandelion leaves)
How to Make Dandelion Tea (from the roots of the plant)
Making Dandelion Jelly
Teaching Children to Forage (with dandelion cookie recipe)
Eating Dandelion Flowers
How to Preserve Dandelion Greens
Dandelion Flower Fritters
Dandelion Leaf Noodles
Dandelion Medicine
Dandelion Leaf Green Smoothie

Cautions: According to the University of Maryland Medical Center, very rarely, people have reactions to dandelion. If you're allergic to "ragweed, chrysanthemums, marigold, chamomile, yarrow, daisies, or iodine, you should avoid dandelion. In some people, dandelion can cause increased stomach acid and heartburn. It may also irritate the skin. People with kidney problems, gallbladder problems, or gallstones should consult their doctors before eating dandelion." Dandelion is a diuretic, which means it may also make other medications less effective. To learn more about this, visit the University of Maryland Medical Center website.

Proverbs 31 Homestead: How to Make Dandelion Wine - A Recipe for Making it the Easy Way! (2024)

FAQs

What kind of yeast for Dandelion Wine? ›

Add a tiny pinch of bread yeast or brewing yeast to help get things going. 7. After three days, sanitize a one-gallon carboy (or brewing bucket), airlock, bung, strainer, and funnel. Strain the brew from the crock into the carboy and top it off with clean water to the top.

What is Dandelion Wine made of? ›

What is Dandelion Wine? Dandelion wine is a country wine brewed with a combination of citrus fruit, raisins, sugar, water, yeast, and, of course, dandelions. It's floral, slightly sweet, and pours as clear and golden as honey.

How much alcohol is in Dandelion Wine? ›

Dandelion wine is made by fermentation of natural sugars in dandelion flowers into alcohol by yeast. The resulting beverage has alcoholic content ranging from 8% to 14% by volume.

What is the plot of Dandelion Wine? ›

Dandelion Wine is a 1957 novel by American author Ray Bradbury that follows the life of twelve-year-old Douglas Spaulding over the course of a magical summer in the fictional Green Town, Illinois.

What kind of yeast can I use to make wine? ›

The most common yeast generally associated with winemaking is Saccharomyces cerevisiae which is also used in bread making and brewing. Other genera of yeast that can be involved in winemaking (either beneficially or as the cause of potential wine faults) include: Brettanomyces (Teleomorph Dekkera)

What are the ingredients in dandelions? ›

The main active compounds of dandelion. Dandelion roots contain mainly sesquiterpene lactones and triterpenes and sterols (taraxasterol, taraxerol, cycloartenol, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol) [18]. Lactones have a bitter taste and are often an ingredient in products that stimulate digestion.

Who should not drink dandelion? ›

In some people, dandelion can cause increased stomach acid and heartburn. It may also irritate the skin. People with kidney problems, gallbladder problems, or gallstones should consult their doctors before eating dandelion.

What is the point of dandelion wine? ›

For centuries, dandelions have been prized for their medicinal qualities, often consumed in the form of dandelion wine or tea to aid in digestion. In New England, there's a long tradition of drinking dandelion wine as an early-spring medicinal tonic.

Can you make homemade wine without yeast? ›

Homemade Natural Wine

Because the reality is that some people may be wondering if you can make wine without adding in your own commercially purchased yeast. And the answer to this question is a resounding yes. In fact, that is how wine has been made historically for millennia.

What kind of baker's yeast is used for wine? ›

Wine yeast has a high alcohol tolerance for it can survive conditions up to 15 -16 % v/v. Bread yeast, on the other hand, can probably produce alcohol up to 6-8 % v/v. This means that bread yeast cannot survive the high alcohol content desired by winemakers.

Do dandelions have natural yeast? ›

In the 1600s, European colonists brought dandelions with them as they journeyed to America. This was for a few reasons: they could eat the greens and dandelions were an abundant source of flavoring and naturally occurring yeast, “meaning, they could make their own wine,” Childs explains.

What yeast is used in rose wine? ›

LEVURE IOC B 2000. The IOC B 2000 strain facilitates the aromatic fruity expression of white and rosé musts. It is suitable for making fresh, aromatic wines. It is used to obtain different aromatic profiles depending on the fermentation temperature and so combine fermentation and varietal notes harmoniously.

Can you use Red Star active dry yeast to make wine? ›

This packet of active dry yeast ferments up to 5 gallons of wine. Red Star recommends rehydrating yeast before pitching.

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