Nettle Cordial and Nettle Gimlet Cocktail Recipe
Its a mistake to think nettles are only delicious as a super-nutritious savoury food. You can be naughty with them too. I highly recommend making syrups and cordials with them, to make quenching soft drinks in summer, or as a sophisticated addition to cocktails.
You’d expect nettle cordial to come out green, and taste, well, green too. Sometimes it does, but more often it has a tendency towards orange and even pink. This varies according to when you pick them and how you treat them. My friend, Hedge Witch, cocktail slinger and Queen of Nettles, Abi Clephane makes a lot of nettle cordial and notes that using dried nettles results in a peach ice tea flavour, and using fresh nettles usually results in a pink cordial with an apricot flavour! We haven’t got to the bottom of this wonderful mystery yet (could the pink/orange colour be related to their super-high iron content..?), but that doesn’t stop me from making gallons of this nectar every spring.
How to make nettle cordial:
- Make a sugar syrup by mixing 1 part water to 1 part white sugar (eg. 50ml:50g) in a pan. Heat it gently and stir until all the sugar is dissolved.
- Wang in a load of nettle tops (top 3 or 4 pairs of leaves & associated stem is fine – don’t be a hero, just wear gloves). How many? Well at least a cup full (pressed down), or more. You’ll need to work that out yourself.
- You can use dried nettles too, which give a slightly different, but equally delicious flavour.
- Let it sit on the heat until its steaming/hot to touch, but don’t boil it. Boiling is the death of many a good syrup/cordial.
- Leave it to cool
- Strain out the nettles – you can put these in the dehydrator to make nice nettle candies.
- Stir in small amounts of citric acid powder or lemon juice until it starts to taste a bit sharp. If you don’t have these, use a wee bit of white wine or cider vinegar to sharpen, or just leave it as a syrup
- The resulting nettle cordial will keep well in your fridge for several weeks, maybe more, depending on how much acid you used and how much you bothered your arse sterilising the bottles.
This makes a lovely quenching diluting drink on warm spring and summer days.
How to Make a Nettle Gimlet:
A gimlet was a small device used to tap barrels of spirits on British Navy ships. Spirit was often mixed with lime cordial to help prevent scurvy on long voyages. While the crew would get rum, the officers usually went for gin. The cocktail evolved from there, the basic version being 50:50 gin to lime cordial, but this might be a bit sweet for modern tastes. If you your nettle cordial has a nice tart edge, you won’t need to add anything. But if its on the sweet side, add a bit of lime juice, or a pinch of citric acid.
- Mix the cordial with gin up to 50:50 (to taste)
- Stir over ice.
- Classically, strain it into a chilled coup glass
- Not at all classically, you can add a splash of soda or tonic to taste. I like a bit of vermouth in mine, but I’m a bitters addict!
6 Comments
Excellent I will be making the cordial cheers
I assume it would be possible to freeze the cordial – thinking of making a large quantity for a party (when allowed!)
Thanks
Yes
Could sumac serve as the tart edge here? I plan to try steeping some in with the nettle infusion. Will report back.
How late in the season can you collect the leaves to make cordial?
Any time, provided its new growth. So, for example, harvesting from a nettle patch that has been cut back, then started to regrow, is fine. If the nettles are just growing unmolested, i’d still happily use the top 4 – 6 leaves until they started to flower/set seed.