Little Trekkers Ambassadors
Scottish Highlands and Islands
We’re Going On An Elderflower Hunt: Part 1
Categories
- Camping Fun
- Community Farms and Small Holdings
- Cycling
- Environmental Education and Wildlife
- Sailing Adventures
- Skiing
- Europe
- Worldwide
- Channel Islands
- Cumbria and the Lake District
- East Anglia
- Mainland Scotland
- Midlands
- Mid Wales
- North East
- North Wales and Anglesey
- North West
- Northern Ireland
- Republic of Ireland
- Scottish Highlands and Islands
- Shetland Islands
- South East
- South Wales
- South West
- Yorkshire
We’re Going On An Elderflower Hunt: Part 1
Every autumn we forage for fruit to make jams and jellies, but we’ve never tried gathering elderflower. With news from my English friends that their second batches of elderflower cordials, wines and champagnes were all stored away, I reckoned it was a good time to look – our growing season is a fair few weeks behind in northern Scotland.
Jon goes mountain-biking regularly in Quarrelwood, Elgin, and he swore that he’d seen lots in flower. So on Saturday morning we armed the minxes with little identification tick lists downloaded from the extremely useful www.naturedetectives.org.uk and set off in search.
After passing lots of flowering rowan, Jon had to sheepishly admit that maybe he’d been passing the trees a little too fast to properly identify them... Still, the minxes enjoyed working in cahoots with each other: Midi spotted different flowers and trees and found their photos on the checklists; Maxi read out from the checklist what the plant was (Midi can’t read yet); then both girls distracted their sister, Mini, from eating or picking it. We also kept Mini out of trouble by encouraging her to stash her treasure (pine cones and shrivelled leaves, mostly) in the little collecting jar Jon made her last year out of a plastic lidded fruit pot and length of string.
We finally found a little tree with some flowering blooms (hooray!) by using our noses. The minxes had fun shaking out the insects and deciding which flower heads to collect and which to leave ‘to turn into elderberries for the birds’. They are currently steeping in a small bowl in the kitchen...
I’ll let you know how the champagne turns out! But in the meantime, can you recommend what types of bottles and jars you use to store yours in? Plastic? Glass? Screw-top?
















Comments (4)
Oooh I'm looking forward to finding out if your Elderflower champagne is a success! Michelle at Little Trekkers HQ is our guru when it comes to things like this so I'm sure she'll post some advice about which type of bottle to use...nudge nudge Michelle! As for me, I'm off to read the Elderflower Hunt Part 2!
It's true, I am the Preserve Queen!! Elderflower champagne can be quite explosive when it ferments so I use screw cap wine bottles or flip cap bottles. Made some last summer. Deeee...li...cious!!!
Thanks Michelle and Kylie! OK, well, it's now in an assortment of plastic bottles and screw top jars. I've left the jar-lids unscrewed in case of explosion (!) and am watching every day for signs of fermentation. The elderflower cordial I made the day after the champagne smells of cat wee (though Jon seems to like it), so I'm really hoping this champagne turns out! I promise to post pics if it does
So... the final verdict: oh my word! I've just had a little sip from one of the bottles. I was convinced that there was no fermentation going on, but the champagne is sweet, aromatic and has a really gentle fizz going on. Yum! And it's just water, lemon, sugar and elderflower Guess what me and Jon will be polishing off this weekend in the sun?! And as it's still in flower up here, we may just have to pick up some more