Easy Home-made Blackberry Gin recipe - tastebotanical (2024)

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Easy Home-made Blackberry Gin recipe - tastebotanical (1)

Home-made Blackberry Gin

This method for home-made Blackberry Gin is incredibly easy and results in a beautiful ruby-coloured, sweet liqueur. It has a delicious, rich, sweet-sour flavour.

I have only recently started making Blackberry Gin. Having had some initial success withElderflower GinandRhubarb Gin(which is great forco*cktails!) last year, I started to think about other seasonal fruits that I could use to produce delicious home-made gin! I have always been a keen blackberry picker but, in the past, have used them for jam and also cakes, puddings and desserts such asBlackberry Muffins, Blackberry Crumble and Blackberry Fool. However, it occurred to me that they might taste pretty good as a flavouring for gin.

Easy Home-made Blackberry Gin recipe - tastebotanical (2)

Late August and early September is blackberry season in the Cotswolds. On my daily dog walks, I see the brambles growing rapidly during early summer. By mid-summer, their flowers are turning to fruit. In late summer, within a week or so, they suddenly seem to be covered in hundreds of juicy blackberries. You can, of course, buy blackberries all year round in supermarkets these days. However, there is nothing like picking your own. Even people who would never forage for any other kind of wild produce have memories of going blackberrying. Where I live, it is a pretty popular thing to do. On my relatively short drive to work last week, I saw no less than three groups of people, equipped with plastic containers and thick gloves, picking the blackberries that grow along the roadside.

In the past few years, there has been an increase in the popularity of flavoured gins, including Blackberry Gin, produced by niche producers and selling for a premium in supermarkets. I think home-made and traditional is best in terms of both flavour and price, so why not try making your own? It is really easy!

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What you need to know about making Blackberry Gin

  • First off, it is incredibly easy. Even to describe it as a recipe is a bit of an exaggeration! You simply need to combine the blackberries, sugar and gin and leave for the delicious fruity flavour to infuse the liquid.
  • However, you do need to think ahead. You cannot just rustle up a batch of Blackberry Gin to drink tomorrow as it needs around a month for the infusion of flavour to happen.
  • I think of this as a seasonal recipe and make it in August and September when there are plentiful wild blackberries growing near my house. I make a lot of infused gins around that time of year using season produce such as damsons, plums and also late rhubarb. Their sweet, fruitiness makes them ideal as drinks over the Christmas and New Year period.
  • However, if you want to make this recipe using bought blackberries – either fresh or frozen – it will still work. It will just be a bit more expensive to make as the main flavouring ingredient is not free! Also, I find that shop-bought blackberries tend to be sweeter than wild blackberries so you won’t get such a tangy sweet-sour flavour.
  • I use a basic, “own-brand” gin from the supermarket to make this recipe. It is not worth using anything fancy. You can also use vodka as an alternative.

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How to drink Blackberry Gin

The result of this recipe is a sweet, alcoholic liqueur-style drink. I like it best served on its own in a small glass (or maybe several small glasses!). You can drink it as an aperitif before a meal or, my preference, as a liqueur at the end of a meal. It is also a good to drink as an accompaniment to a dessert course, as alternative to a dessert wine. This is particularly true if the dessert includes blackberries or other complementary flavours such as apple.

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Other home-made fruit gins

If you enjoy this Blackberry Gin, you may also be interested in my other easy recipes for Rhubarb Gin, Plum Gin, Damson Gin and Elderflower Gin.

Blackberry Gin recipe

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Easy Home-made Blackberry Gin recipe - tastebotanical (6)

Blackberry Gin

★★★★★5 from 3 reviews

  • Author: Tastebotanical
  • Prep Time: 15
  • Total Time: 15
  • Yield: 200 ml 1x
  • Category: Gin
  • Cuisine: English
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Description

Making your own Blackberry Gin is so easy and the end result is a delicious reminder of blackberry season that you can enjoy all year around!

Ingredients

Scale

  • 200 g (7 oz) blackberries
  • 100 g (3.5 oz) caster or super-fine sugar
  • 200 ml (quarter of a pint) gin

Instructions

  1. Wash the blackberries thoroughly.
  2. Mix the blackberries thoroughly with the sugar in a large bowl.
  3. Spoon the blackberries and sugar into a sterilised jar. Leave for 24 hours to allow the blackberries to macerate in the sugar and release their juices.
  4. Add the gin to the jar of blackberries and sugar. Shake thoroughly to ensure it is mixed.
  5. Leave in a cool, dry, dark place for four weeks.
  6. At the end of that time, the gin is ready to drink! Strain the gin into sterilised bottles through a muslin cloth held in a funnel and it will keep for approximately six months.

Notes

You can sterilise your jar by washing it in warm, soapy water, rinsing well and then drying off for 15 minutes in an oven set at 140C/120C fan/gas 1.

Although it only takes 15 minutes preparation time, you will need to allow 24 hours for the blackberries to macerate in the sugar and, once you have added the gin, it will take a further four weeks to allow the flavour to develop.

You can scale this recipe up or down according to how many blackberries you feel like picking. Add half as much weight in sugar as your weight of blackberries. The amount of gin in ml should be equivalent to the weight in grams of your blackberries.

Keywords: blackberries, blackberry, gin, home-made gin, blackberry recipe

Easy Home-made Blackberry Gin recipe - tastebotanical (2024)

FAQs

How do you make blaeberry gin? ›

*Bilberry gin: Lightly crush 1lb washed bilberries and put in jar. Add 75cl of gin, 4 tbsps of sugar (or to taste), shake to dissolve and leave for at least three months. Strain, bottle and drink.

Is blackberry gin sweet? ›

Initial floral hints of violet followed by rich blackberry jam notes. The result is a bright, fruity and refreshing gin with a beautifully sweet finish and a well-rounded mouthfeel.

How is sloe gin made? ›

Find good sloes (on the land or online), freeze them overnight, add enough fruit to almost half-fill a bottle, then top it up with good-quality gin. Wait 2-3 months before adding sugar or syrup to taste – then enjoy them in a range of pink-hued sloe gin co*cktails, from a Sloe Bramble to a special occasion Sloe Royale.

How is botanical gin made? ›

Gin is a neutral spirit flavored with botanicals, primarily juniper. There are two key steps to production: First, a neutral base spirit (similar to vodka) is made. Then, the base spirit is redistilled with botanicals to extract essential oils and aromas and build flavor.

What are the botanical berries in gin? ›

Juniper berries (Juniperus communis)

The main flavouring in all gins, juniper is a member of the cypress family and the berries used in gin production usually comes from Italy, Serbia, Macedonia and India. The best juniper berries are generally considered to be from mountain slopes in Tuscany and Macedonia.

What botanicals for homemade gin? ›

Recipe 6
  • Juniper - About 2 Spoonful's.
  • Whole Coriander - Heaping 1/4 tsp.
  • Rosemary - Heaping 1/4 tsp.
  • Lavender Flowers - Heaping 1/4 tsp.
  • Rose Hips - 2.
  • Allspice Berries - 2.
  • Fennel Seed - 1/8 tsp.
  • Pulverized Dried Lemon Peel - 1/8 tsp.

How to make gin at home easy? ›

Method for how to make gin at home:
  1. Sterilise a clean mason jar or glass bottle with boiling water.
  2. Add your botanicals to the jar, minus any fresh peel.
  3. Top up with vodka.
  4. Leave to infuse in a cool dark place for 24 hours.
  5. Taste the infusion – it should have taken on some lovely juniper ginnyness already.

What is the secret ingredient in gin? ›

Juniper Berries

“It wouldn't be gin without juniper, you can smell gin just by crushing a juniper berry in your hand.” Red Door Gin's signature botanical is punchy, piney and fresh flavoured.

What is the tastiest gin? ›

Taster's Club Best Gin Brands in 2023
  • Hendricks. Launched in 1999, Hendrick's is an unusual, distinct, and incredibly smooth gin created from 11 fine botanicals. ...
  • Tanqueray. ...
  • Bombay Sapphire. ...
  • Nolet's. ...
  • Beefeater London Dry Gin. ...
  • Bayab African Dry Gin.

What tonic is best with blackberry gin? ›

In the case of blackberry gin and tonic it's all about the tonic water of choice, instead. For this version of the co*cktail I strongly recommend the use of pink tonic water to enhance the flavour of the berries.

What does blackberry gin taste like? ›

Whitley Neill Blackberry Gin tastes of fresh plump berries and hints of floral hedgerow. A smooth flavour, with a core of delicious, piney juniper followed by zesty sweet citrus and hints of wonderful black pepper. The finish has a little earthiness alongside the warming spice of cassia.

Is homemade sloe gin stronger than gin? ›

Sloe Gin tends to have a lower alcohol content than traditional gin of 15 and 30 percent by volume. The Settlers Sloe Gin is pleasantly tart with attractive juniper and herbal notes, but is a proper gin with an alcohol content of 43 ABV.

Why is sloe gin weaker than gin? ›

Then, the highly astringent sloe berry is macerated (or steeped) in the gin, and sweetened. It turns into a beautifully soft, slightly sweet, botanical, nutty liqueur that's a little lower in alcohol content than a traditional gin."

Why does my sloe gin taste bitter? ›

They (the berries) need to be in the Gin for at least 2 months but too long and the berries disintegrate and the liquor can taste bitter.

What are the 3 key ingredients in gin? ›

The primary three ingredients used in the majority of gins are juniper, coriander and angelica. Even though these are the most popular, there are hundreds of flowers, roots, fruits, berries and nuts that are used to create a palate for each gin that makes it distinctive.

Do they make gin out of juniper berries? ›

Gin is made from a fermentable grain, starch, or fruit; juniper berries; and other botanicals. To be classified as gin, the spirit must contain juniper and be at least 40% alcohol by volume. Gin is different from other liquors because of the use of botanicals in the distillation process.

Is Tanqueray gin made from juniper berries? ›

Gin London Dry Tanqueray is one of the best known and most appreciated labels in the world of Gin. Its dry, fresh, delicate and essential style comes from the use of only four main botanicals: juniper berries, angelica root, coriander and licorice.

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