Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (2024)

Dandelion wine captures the essence of summer. Sweet, floral and with subtle notes of honey, dandelion wine is tasty enough to bring out the forager in anyone. It takes quite a few dandelions to make wine, so it’s best to enlist the help of as many small children as possible.

Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (1)

The author of Backyard Medicine talks about how her very first job as a child was collecting dandelions for her neighbor’s dandelion wine. He paid her by the paper sack full and she was happy to do it.

The first time we made dandelion mead, a type of dandelion honey wine, I enlisted the help of a 4-year-old neighbor girl. She picked enough dandelions for a 5-gallon batch in about an hour.

After that, every time I saw her for the rest of the summer she would bring me dandelions. That little neighbor girl is a teenager now, and I have my own daughter to lend a hand.

Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (2)

The real work in making dandelion wine is not collecting the dandelions. It’s in splitting apart the dandelions and removing the green leaves from each blossom.The green leaves have a milky sap that will ruin the taste of dandelion wine, and a good batch only uses the petals.

This year, my 3-year-old daughter picked about a gallon of blossoms in about 15 minutes, but we spent over an hour picking the petals from the flower heads.

It’s pleasant work for a warm afternoon, and I had my best girl sitting across from me. I successfully bribed her for the task by promising that some of the blossoms would be used to make dandelion ice cream.

(Since then I’ve bribed the littles with dandelion cookies, dandelion marshmallows, and even dandelion gummy bears…there’s a reason I have so many dandelion recipes in my back pocket…and that reason is wine!)

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Separating dandelion petals for homemade wine

Given that it’s a bit labor-intensive to clean dandelion flowers for wine, plan on making a small batch.

You can make a 5-gallon batch in a traditional carboy, but unless you’ve got a lot of devoted friends, your fingers will likely give out before you have enough dandelion petals.

I had originally planned to make a super tiny 1-quart batch in a quart mason jar. It’s easy enough to attach a mason jar fermentation kit and brew on a very tiny scale.

In the end, we made better progress than I’d anticipated and ended up with enough petals for a full one-gallon batch of dandelion wine.

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That means I get to try out my new wide mouth one-gallon carboy. If you’ve ever tried to clean out a narrow neck carboy after you’ve brewed with flower petals or any other small particulate, you’ll understand why the wide mouth is so convenient.

Dandelion petals will glue themselves to the inside of the neck of your fermentation vessel and you’ll be scrubbing with a bottle brush for a while unless you use something big enough to get a hand into.

After the primary ferment, the dandelion petals need to be filtered out as the wine is racked into a clean secondary fermentation vessel.

The wide mouth on this fermenter makes that an easy job, and you can just scoop the floating flower petals off the surface before racking.

Racking is a winemaking term, but it just means transferring the wine to a new clean container while leaving the sediment at the bottom behind. This is often done with a siphon for the best results, but it can be done by just pouring the wine carefully into a new container.

It helps to have 2 fermentation vessels, so there’s a clean one waiting, but lacking that, pouring the dandelion wine into a pair of half-gallon mason jars temporarily while you wash out the fermenter works too.

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Removing dandelion petals from dandelion wine during racking, after the primary ferment.

This dandelion wine is made using a cold infusion, which means that the sugar syrup goes in cold, and more of the floral flavor of the dandelions is preserved in the final wine.

You can just make a dandelion tea and filter out the petals before brewing, but the hot water used to make the tea will drive off some of the volatile flavors of the dandelions, and the resulting wine will taste a bit different.

Still, making a tea is much cleaner than brewing with flower petals in the fermenter, and you won’t run the risk of the flower petals bubbling up into the airlock and clogging up the works. If that does happen, just take off the airlock and clean things out before putting it all back together.

If you’re lacking a siphon or other brewing equipment, you can simply brew up this dandelion wine in a pair of half-gallon mason jars equipped with inexpensive silicone water locks. Once the primary ferment is over, scoop off the dandelion petals and carefully pour the wine through a fine mesh strainer into the secondary, leaving the sediment behind.

Reattach a water lock and you’re good to go until bottling time.

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Pouring small batch dandelion wine through a fine mesh strainer to remove the petals.

The final wine has a cleaner flavor if you don’t add raisins to the batch, but the yeast work more efficiently with either a few raisins in the wine to provide micro-nutrients that are missing from plain table sugar.

You can also add 1 teaspoon of yeast nutrient to the dandelion wine which will provide nutrients for the yeast without changing the flavor of the finished wine.

That’s really the best solution for the best dandelion wine quality.

How Does Dandelion Wine Taste?

If you’ve done it right, a propper dandelion wine tastes sweet, mild, and floral. You can almost feel the sunshine splash against your tongue, and it goes down smooth with no hints of bitterness.

We tried this batch in January, after about 6 months in the bottle and it was just right. More importantly, it was just what I needed on a cold Vermont evening, with more snow in the forecast and several feet already down on the ground.

Spring will come again, and sipping this little beauty brings me hope.

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Winemaking Recipes

Looking for more ways to fill your glass with homemade wine?

  • Lilac Wine
  • Strawberry Wine
  • Blueberry Wine
  • Cherry Wine
  • Apple Wine
Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (8)

Yield: 1 gallon (about 4 bottles)

A sweet floral wine that captures the very essence of summer in a bottle.

Ingredients

  • 3 quarts water (approximate, more to fill)
  • 3 pounds sugar roughly 5 to 6 cups
  • 1-quart dandelion petals, packed from roughly 3-4 quarts blossoms
  • 3 oranges juice and zest
  • 1 lemon juice and zest
  • 1 tsp yeast nutrient(https://amzn.to/2GOaDCM)
  • 1 packet wine yeast(https://amzn.to/2W8Y5ex)

Instructions

  1. Bring the water and sugar to a boil in a saucepan.Stir to dissolve the sugar and cool to lukewarm.
  2. Place the dandelion petals, citrus juice and zest into a one-gallon fermentation vessel.Add the yeast nutrient and pour the lukewarm sugar water over the top.
  3. Dissolve a packet of champagne yeast or other wine yeast in lukewarm water.Allow it to stand for 5 minutes to rehydrate and then pour it into the wine.Top off with a bit of extra water to bring to fill the carboy, but be sure to leave at least an inch of headspace.
  4. Cap with an airlock and ferment for about 3 weeks or until fermentation has stopped.It will take a bit longer if you don't use raisins because they provide extra micro-nutrients to get the yeast working faster.
  5. Siphon the wine into a clean container, leaving the yeast sediment behind. Allow the wine to ferment in secondary for at least 6 to 8 weeks, checking the water lock periodically to ensure that the water hasn't evaporated.
  6. Sciphon the dandelion wine into a clean container, again leaving the sediment behind, to prepare for bottling.
  7. Bottle the dandelion wine in corked wine bottles for longer storage, or flip top Grolschbottles for tiny batches you're not planning on storing long.
  8. Allow the wine age in the bottle at least 2 months before drinking, ideally 6 months or more. Note: During aging, the wine should be kept somewhere cool-ish like a basem*nt or closet on the north side of the house.

If you’d like to make dandelion wine without investing a lot of time, divide the recipe by 4 to make a super small 1-quart batch. It’s a great solution for those that just want to try it, but don’t want to spend all day plucking apart petals.

All you need is a quart mason jar and a mason jar fermentation kit.

A full packet of champagne yeast will be overkill in a quart batch, so be sure to only use about 1/4 of a packet. Save the rest for another small batch brew, and maybe give small-batch mead a try with any of these mead recipes.

More Dandelion Recipes

  • Dandelion Root Coffee
  • How to Cook Dandelion Roots
  • How to Make Dandelion Tincture

Fun Facts…There’s actually a Ray Bradbury novel titled Dandelion Wine, where the drink serves as a metaphor for packing all the joys of summer into a single bottle. How’s this for nostalgia…

“The summer of ’28 was a vintage season for a growing boy. A summer of green apple trees, mowed lawns, and new sneakers. Of half-burnt firecrackers, of gathering dandelions, of Grandma’s belly-busting dinner. It was a summer of sorrows and marvels and gold-fuzzed bees. A magical, timeless summer in the life of a twelve-year-old boy.”

Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (9)

Related

Homemade Dandelion Wine Recipe (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.

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.

Can I freeze dandelions for wine? ›

There is no way you can pick enough dandelions for making a large batch of wine in one session. So indeed freeze them. You will need about 75 gram dandelions for 1 liter wine.

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.

Is 7.5% alcohol a lot in wine? ›

Most wine is about 12 to 13 percent alcohol. Some can be as low as 7% and some as high as 18% and fortified wines even higher.

Is dandelion wine good for the liver? ›

Dandelion wine is the classic flower wine, made with the bright yellow flowers of the plentiful and easy-to-find weed. Don't believe the hype of the manicured lawn lobby; dandelion is not only beautiful and tasty, but potent liver-cleansing medicine.

Why can't you eat the stem of a dandelion? ›

The dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) is an abundant “weed” plant that also happens to be edible. In fact, nearly the entire plant can be consumed in one way or another. The only inedible part is the stem, which contains a very bitter, milky substance.

Should dandelion wine be chilled? ›

Dandelion wine has been likened to mead, with a hint of honey taste to it. This wine should be served chilled, and although it won't technically spoil, if it is aged too long it may not taste quite as good.

What part of the dandelion is most beneficial? ›

Parts Used

The leaves are used to stimulate the appetite and help digestion. Dandelion flower has antioxidant properties. Dandelion may also help improve the immune system. Herbalists use dandelion root to detoxify the liver and gallbladder, and dandelion leaves to help kidney function.

Is dandelion wine good for you? ›

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.

How to make forever dandelion? ›

Pick a few dandelions where the flower has finished blooming and the fluffy white is just visible. Take one dandelion and cut the stem to the length you want it to be so that it fits in your jar. Insert a wire into the stem so that it just pokes into the head (to provide some support when it opens).

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.

How does Dandelion Wine end? ›

And sure enough, Dandelion Wine ends with Doug going to bed in the same room in which he awakens at the beginning, performing the same ritual: He pretends to turn off the lights in the houses just as he pretends to turn them on in the morning, bestowing a happy ending upon Green Town before settling down for his own.

What does Dandelion Wine smell like? ›

It smelled like grass clippings during fermentation, which I found quite unpleasant. The wine however, finished OK, and had a sweetish, almondy flavour.

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.

Can 8 alcohol wine get you drunk? ›

The answer is yes. If you consume enough wine, you can become intoxicated. The amount of wine needed to get drunk varies depending on several factors, such as your body weight, metabolism, and tolerance to alcohol. However, as a general rule, drinking more than one glass of wine per hour can lead to intoxication.

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