Warm & Golden Dandelion Wine Recipe (Old-Fashioned Wine Making) (2024)

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Wine out of dandelions? You bet! Making homemade dandelion wine is a longstanding family tradition. We don't make it every year, but I do like to keep a few bottles on hand for company.

The taste of this dandelion wine is rich, golden and warming – more like a good brandy than a wine. I've had friends who don't normally like wine comment that they do enjoy this “spring tonic”.

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When we getdandelions, we get LOTS OF DANDELIONS! They are everywhere! (Boy photos are from 2010. They have grown quite a bit since then, but I kept these photos here for the happy memories.)

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Make sure your dandelion flowers are free of pesticides, herbicides and other contaminants. I don't rinse the blossoms, though they are sterilized during the first part of brewing.

Don't pick dandelion blossoms for wine or eating from an area used by pets for their “bathroom”. As I explained to a reader in the comments, I'm fairly sure goat pee will not wash off.

What part of the dandelion is dandelion wine made from?

For dandelion wine, use the yellow flower petals only. Leaving the petals attached to the green base of the flower will result in a bitter, unpleasant wine.

My neighbor made this mistake when she tried to make dandelion wine, and she ended up throwing out the whole batch.

I use 3 quarts of loosely packed yellow dandelion petals (pictured below). Not 3 quarts of flower heads, 3 quarts of petals only.

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If you don't have enough dandelion petals from one picking, freeze the petals until you have enough.

All your fermentation vessels should be glass, ceramic, stainless steel or food grade plastic. Never ferment in aluminum or iron, as it can react with the wine.

The boys and I sat down to a session of “second picking” to remove the yellow petals from the blossoms. You want to remove the petals as soon as possible after picking, as the flower heads close over time. Once they close, it's tough to get the petals off.

If you are working alone, it may be best to pick some of the flowers needed, remove petals, then pick more flowers and repeat. That way, you won't have trouble with the flower heads closing before you have time to clean them.

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Making Homemade Dandelion Wine

Dandelion wine, believed to be of Celtic origin, is regarded as one of the fine country wines of Europe. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, it was not proper for ladies to drink alcohol. However, dandelion flower wine was considered so therapeutic to the kidneys and digestive system that it was deemed medicinal even for the ladies.

Adapted from Dandelion Medicine, in combination with my mother's recipe.

Ingredients

  • 3 quarts dandelion petals
  • 1 gallon water
  • 2 oranges, with peel, preferably organic
  • 1 lemon, with peel, preferably organic
  • 3 pounds sugar
  • 1 package wine yeast or champagne yeast
  • 1 pound raisins, preferably organic

How to make dandelion wine – Directions

1) Collect the blossoms when they are fully open on a sunny day. Remove any green parts.

2) Bring the water to a boil and pour it over the flowers in a large pot or crock. Cover with a towel to keep dust out and let steep for three days. Stir daily to keep the petals submerged. They will develop a musty smell, which is normal.

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3) Prepare the oranges and the lemon. Zest about half of the rind and peel off the rest in thin strips. You want to minimize the amount of white pith added to the brew. Peel the pith off the fruit and slice into thin rounds.

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4) Add the lemon and orange zest to the flower-water mixture and bring to a boil. Remove from heat, strain out solids. Dissolve the sugar in the flower water. Allow to cool to room temperature.

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5) Add the yeast, orange and lemon slices, and raisins to the liquid. Put everything into a crock (or wide mouth carboy with airlock) to ferment. I cover my crock with a clean cotton towel held down by a rubber band to keep dust and bugs out. Stir daily with a wooden spoon or non-reactive stir stick.

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Bottling the Wine

You have two options for bottling your homemade dandelion wine. You can- let it finish in bottles, or move to a carboy and then bottle.

To finish in bottles: When the primary fermentation mixture stops bubbling (1 -2 weeks), fermentation is almost done. Strain the liquid through several layers of cheesecloth or a flour sack towel and transfer to sterilized bottles.

Slip a deflated balloon over the top of each bottle to monitor for further fermentation. When the balloon remains deflated for 24 hours, fermentation is complete.

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Cork the bottles and store in a cool, dark place for at least six months before drinking.

NOTE: Do not seal bottles tightly before they finish fermenting, and don't put them somewhere warm. Otherwise, you'll end up with exploding bottles, like my sister, Mary, when she stashed them in a closet. Apparently, it sounded like there were bombs going off or they were being shot at.

If you would like a clearer wine, rack the wine into a gallon carboy with airlockbefore the final bottling. Allow to ferment in the carboy for 2-3 months, and then rack into the bottles.

If you'd like to download a pdf of my wine labels, use this link: Printable Dandelion Wine Labels.

If you don't want to send the wine fruit to the compost pile, try Dandelion Wine Fruitcake.

Recommended materials for Making Dandelion Wine

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Old-Fashioned Dandelion Wine Recipe

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5 from 13 reviews

A smooth and hearty flower wine with citrus notes that will warm you from head to toe.

  • Author: Laurie Neverman
  • Yield: 45 bottles 1x

Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • 3 quarts dandelion blossoms
  • 1 gallon water
  • 2 oranges, with peel, preferably organic
  • 1 lemon, with peel, preferably organic
  • 3 pounds sugar
  • 1 package wine yeast
  • 1 pound raisins, preferably organic

Instructions

  1. Collect the blossoms when they are fully open on a sunny day. Remove any green parts.
  2. Bring the water to a boil and pour it over the flowers in a large pot or crock. Cover with a towel to keep dust out and let steep for three days. Still daily to keep the petals submerged.
  3. Prepare the oranges and the lemon. Zest (finely grate) about half of the rind and peel the rest off in very thin strips. You want to minimize the amount of white pith added to the brew.
  4. Finish peeling the citrus, and slice them into thin rounds.
  5. Add the lemon and the orange zest to the flower-water mixture and bring to a boil. Remove from heat, strain out solids, then add the sugar, stirring until it is dissolved. Allow to cool to room temperature.
  6. Add the yeast, orange and lemon slices, and raisins to the liquid. Put everything into a crock (or wide mouth carboy with airlock) to ferment. I cover my crock with a clean cotton towel held down by a rubber band. Stir daily with a wooden spoon or non-reactive stir stick.

Bottling the Wine

You have two options for bottling your homemade dandelion wine. You can- let it finish in bottles, or move to a carboy and then bottle.

To finish in bottles: When the primary fermentation mixture stops bubbling (1 -2 weeks), fermentation is almost done. Strain the liquid through several layers of cheesecloth or a flour sack towel and transfer to sterilized bottles.

Slip a deflated balloon over the top of each bottle to monitor for further fermentation. When the balloon remains deflated for 24 hours, fermentation is complete.

Cork the bottles and store in a cool, dark place for at least six months before drinking.

If you would like a clearer wine, rack the wine into a gallon carboy with airlock before the final bottling. Allow to ferment in the carboy for 2-3 months, and then rack into the bottles.

Notes

Do not seal bottles tightly before they finish fermenting, and don’t put them somewhere warm. Otherwise, you’ll end up with exploding bottles, like my sister, Mary, when she stashed them in a closet. Apparently, it sounded like there were bombs going off or they were being shot at.

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Is Dandelion Wine Alcoholic?

Yes. If you use wine yeast as recommended in the recipe, you should end up with around 12 to 13 percent alcohol.

If you're feeling adventurous, you may be able to nurture wild yeast from the raisins into fermenting. Wild yeast brews will have a lower alcohol content, because wild yeast dies off if the alcohol levels get too high.

You can learn more about using wild yeasts in the book, “The Wildcrafting Brewer“. The Art of Herbal Fermentation online class from The Herbal Academy is another good resource.

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Is Dandelion Wine Medicinal?

According to health experts, nearly every part of dandelion is full of nutritional value, with vitamins and minerals packed in every part of the plant. Aside from its great taste in wine making, it also has been used throughout history for its medicinal properties.

For more information, check out .

You may also enjoy:

  • Harvesting and Using Dandelion Roots
  • Low Sugar Dandelion Jelly Recipe
  • Stop the Dandelion Madness!
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This article is written byLaurie Neverman. Laurie grew up in the kitchen, learning baking and home cooking from her momma. At age 15, she and her mom and two sisters created Irene’s Custom Cakes & Catering. This was her summer job through most of high school and college.

Originally published in 2010, last updated in 2023.

Warm & Golden Dandelion Wine Recipe (Old-Fashioned Wine Making) (2024)

FAQs

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.

How do you harvest dandelions for wine? ›

Although dandelion greens are certainly worthy of a forager's attention, when harvesting for winemaking, you're only after the flower. After harvesting, you have to separate the petals from the sepal—the green cup at the flower's base—because the greens will impart a bitter taste to your wine.

What is the history of dandelion wine? ›

Dandelion wine dates back several centuries as a cheap man's wine in Europe. The tradition continued with settlers in the Great Plains of North America because dandelions even grow in dry, sparse environments. Plus… those pioneers probably needed a drink after a long day sowing the plains.

Can you freeze dandelion flowers for wine? ›

“Begin by gathering your flowers,” writes Merril, “perhaps the most pleasurable part of the winemaking process.” As a general guideline, pick about a gallon of flowers per gallon of wine you intend to make. If you cannot gather this many in a single outing, freeze what you gather until you accumulate enough.

What is the point of dandelion wine? ›

In the story, dandelion wine, as made by the protagonist's grandfather, serves as a metaphor for distilling all of the joys of summer. The main character of the story is Douglas Spaulding, a 12-year-old boy loosely patterned after Bradbury.

What should dandelion wine taste like? ›

Dandelion wine tastes like slightly sweet champagne and is almost alcohol-free. This wine takes about six months to mature. During this time, it becomes light and transparent.

What part of the dandelion is dandelion wine made from? ›

For true dandelion wine, you only want the yellow flowers. No green bits, no leaves, no roots. Not to say you can't add them, but traditionally the wine is made from the yellow flowers. It takes a lot of flower heads to do this, so recruit some friends or kids to help you pick them.

What do dandelions symbolize in dandelion wine? ›

Pressed into wine and bottled, the dandelion represents summer itself, and a drop of the drink brings the taste of magical life. The many bottles of wine, one for each day of the summer, represent the memories of events that have passed by, and drinking one is like remembering that particular day.

Should I pull dead dandelions? ›

Dig 'em Out

Removing the dandelion's entire tap root is essential! If you remove just the dandelion flower and plant from the surface of the soil a new plant will grow. Even removing a couple inches of root won't kill it. Dandelions can easily reproduce from the remaining root.

How old is dandelion wine? ›

…of Bradbury's most personal works, Dandelion Wine (1957), is an autobiographical novel about a magical but too brief summer of a 12-year-old boy in Green Town, Illinois (a fictionalized version of his childhood home of Waukegan). His next collection, A Medicine for Melancholy (1959), contained “All Summer in a Day,”…

What alcohol is made from dandelions? ›

From wine and mead to amaro and tonics, the spring dandelion has long been a prized plant in beverages. Spring Tonic, featuring dandelion root- and flower- infused gin, dandelion wine, lemon and tonic water.

What is the oldest vintage wine in the world? ›

Speyer Wine Bottle 325-350 AD

The Speyer wine bottle is believed to be the oldest bottle of wine in the world. Displayed in the Pfalz Historical Museum in Germany, this ancient bottle dates back almost 1,700 years.

What are the side effects of using 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.

Why can't you freeze wine? ›

Both red wines and white wines will freeze. A wine with lower ABV, or non-alcoholic wine, will freeze faster, and become more solid when frozen. Just like other liquids when they freeze, wine will expand, therefore we advise against freezing unopened bottles of wine.

Is 7.5% alcohol a lot in wine? ›

The average glass of wine contains about 11 percent to 13 percent alcohol, but bottles range from as little as 5.5 percent ABV to as much as around 20 percent ABV.

What is the highest alcohol in wine? ›

Truth be told, alcohol content in wine ranges wildly from as low as 5.5% to 23% ABV. There are several factors that affect the alcohol content of wine including the style of wine, quality level, and climate where the grapes grow.

What wine is 20% alcohol? ›

As for reds, these include California Sirah and Zinfandel, Italian Amarone, and fortified Portuguese port. Port Wine can end up with percentages as high as 20%, making them the seemingly most potent wine out there.

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