Devon Elderflower Cordial Recipe

Devon Elderflower Cordial Recipe

Truly the taste of summer, this cordial is delicious with still or sparkling water, and even better added to a glass of sparkling wine. The recipe makes about 800ml of cordial - you can store it in a sterilised glass screw-top wine or juice bottle (the hot cycle of a dishwasher should be fine for sterilising) and it will keep in the fridge for 2-3 weeks.

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Now that the snow is just a distant memory and summer is (at last) well under way, Devon’s gardens and hedgerows are bursting with blossoms and fresh greenery. There is so much ‘wild food’ out there if you know what to look for and where to find it; Elderflowers are one of the best seasonal treasures to spot, with their small, cloud-like heads of tiny white flowers and their heady scent. These pretty flowers need to be cooked before they are eaten, and can be used to make delicious and unique-tasting jams, drinks, fritters and more. Choose a sunny day to pick them (stick to public spaces away from road pollution if you can, and get permission first before heading on to private land), take only what you need, and never eat anything you can’t identify confidently.

Ingredients

2 Lemons, zested (and reserved for juicing after the infusing time is up)
1 further Lemon, juice only
14 Elderflower heads
315g Caster Sugar
500ml boiling Water

Method

First, place your Elderflowers upside-down outside or on some newspaper for about an hour, to allow any small creatures to escape, but don’t wash the flowers. Next, put the flowers into a large saucepan or bowl with the lemon zest, and pour in the boiling water, stirring gently. Allow to cool, then cover with a lid or clean tea-towel and leave to infuse for at least 24 hours (you don’t need to refrigerate it), and for a further day if you don’t mind waiting.

When the infusing is done, pour the liquid through a very fine sieve or a muslin cloth (some of us have been known to use a clean pair of unwanted tights for this!) into a large, clean saucepan, squeezing the flowers gently to get all the moisture through. Discard all the flowers and peel left in the sieve (they make good compost), then pour the juice from all three lemons into the pan and add the sugar. Put the pan over a medium-high heat and cook for about five minutes, stirring frequently until the sugar has dissolved and the pan is just coming up to a simmer. Take the pan off the heat, allow it to cool a little, then pour the cordial into the sterilised bottle and screw the lid on tight. Store in the refrigerator.

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