Ad

  • 2 ½kg white sugar
    either granulated or caster
  • 2 unwaxed lemons
  • 20 fresh elderflower
    heads, stalks trimmed
  • 85g citric acid
    (from chemists)

Nutrition: per 250ml

  • kcal619
  • fat0g
  • saturates0g
  • carbs165g
  • sugars165g
  • fibre0g
  • protein0g
  • salt0.03g
    low
Ad

Method

  • step 1

    Put the sugar and 1.5 litres/2¾ pints water into the largest saucepan you have. Gently heat, without boiling, until the sugar has dissolved. Give it a stir every now and again. Pare the zest from the lemons using a potato peeler, then slice the lemons into rounds.

  • step 2

    Once the sugar has dissolved, bring the pan of syrup to the boil, then turn off the heat. Fill a washing up bowl with cold water. Give the flowers a gentle swish around to loosen any dirt or bugs. Lift flowers out, gently shake and transfer to the syrup along with the lemons, zest and citric acid, then stir well. Cover the pan and leave to infuse for 24 hrs.

  • step 3

    Line a colander with a clean tea towel, then sit it over a large bowl or pan. Ladle in the syrup – let it drip slowly through. Discard the bits left in the towel. Use a funnel and a ladle to fill sterilised bottles (run glass bottles through the dishwasher, or wash well with soapy water. Rinse, then leave to dry in a low oven). The cordial is ready to drink straight away and will keep in the fridge for up to 6 weeks.

RECIPE TIPS
USE YOUR CORDIAL TO...

Drizzle over fruit salad; whip into a gooseberry fool; set into jellies and serve with berries; splash over the sponge in a trifle; drizzle over lemon sorbet.

PICKING ELDERFLOWERS

Elders burst into life at the end of May and flower through to the middle of June. The secret to making a well-flavoured cordial is to pick flowers on a sunny day before it gets too hot, then use as soon as possible. Choose the freshest-looking heads, frothy with creamy-white flowers.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, June 2010

Ad

Comments, questions and tips (109)

Rate this recipe

What is your star rating out of 5?

Choose the type of message you'd like to post

Choose the type of message you'd like to post

Overall rating

A star rating of 4.5 out of 5.102 ratings

Yorkymum

question

Just checking the sugar quantity - wasn't sure if the recipe calls for 2 x half kg of sugar (i.e. 1 kg), or two and a half kilograms of sugar. Can anyone confirm? Many thanks.

LizHodgson

2.5 kg it means I’ve made this lots of times it’s absolutely gorgeous but I put a lot more elderflower heads in about 60 the flavour is sensational nothing like the elderflower cordial the shops sell

sara67

question

Do you pick the flowers off the stem? I've heard the stems can make it smell like cat pee.

rjdbem

The cat pee smell sometimes happens if you pick them when the sun's not shining on them. I've never had bother with the stems.

yp88tb7fpr74970

question

How long will it last in the fridge without citric acid please?

LizHodgson

I can’t use citric acid so I make 2 batches one without one with & I make a lot of this so I freeze it too in plastic bottles it doesn’t totally freeze but stays in freezer for months tastes just as good when it’s used. I do use more lemons otherwise it can too sweet

Stewy65

Thanks for this super simple and delicious recipe. Just finished off last years batch that kept no problem in the fridge. This time I didn’t have enough white sugar and supplemented it with dark brown 1/5 Personally I prefer the flavour. I am also flat freezing the sugar and elderflower infused…

katrinacampbell9

Would you leave it to soak out on the side or put it in the fridge?

trishowen

Out of fridge

Ad
Ad
Ad
Loading...
Loading...