Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (2024)

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Elderflower season is an exciting but short lived time. Every year I try to find some way to preserve the elderflower harvest so that I can enjoy them for a longer period of time. I’ve been wanting to try making elderflower liqueur (also known as St. Germain) for some time now. This year the local elder trees were absolutely loaded with elderflowers, so I decided to make this delicious elderflower liqueur!

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (1)

Harvesting Elderflowers

Elderflowers appear before elderberries, and they arrive anytime between May through July, depending on your location and climate.

It’s important to consider that elderflowers turn into elderberries, so taking them will mean fewer berries on the tree. This usually isn’t an issue as elder trees are widespread and very prolific.

Regardless, do try and only take a few flowers from each tree if possible.

Read my post on foraging elderflowers and elderberries to learn more.

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (2)

Insects love elderflowers, so be sure to give the flowers a few shakes before using to remove them. It also helps to let them sit for an hour or two outside to let any remaining bugs vacate.

The leaves, stems, seeds, and unripe berries of elder are toxic when consumed in large amounts, so remember that when making any kind of elderflower or elderberry preparation.

How to Make Elderflower Liqueur

Depending on the size of the elderflowers you collect, you will need about 20-30 whole flower heads for this liqueur recipe.

Although it’s a bit labor intensive, it’s important to cut the flowers off with as little stem as possible attached. This is because the stems contain a toxic compound and can cause stomach upset in large amounts in some people.

If you don’t have access to fresh elderflowers, dried elderflowers can also be used, just use about half as much as fresh.

Fill a quart jar with the elderflowers, leaving an inch or two of space at the top.

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (3)

Pour a 750ml bottle of vodka over the elderflowers, then top the jar with lemon slices to keep the flowers submerged under the vodka.

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (4)

Cover the jar with a lid and put it in a cool and dark place to infuse for 2-4 weeks.

When ready to use, strain out the elderflowers with a fine mesh sieve, then add the optional honey or sugar and stir well or shake to combine.

The elderflower liqueur can be consumed right away, or aged longer if desired. It will keep indefinitely!

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (5)

Elderflower Liqueur co*cktail Recipes

Can I tell you how amazing this elderflower liqueur is? It is so incredibly good, and it makes a great summer co*cktail! I like to simply combine it with some sparkling mineral water, and in my opinion that’s all you really need.

If you want to get more fancy than that, here are some amazing sounding elderflower liqueur co*cktail recipes to try:

Now you’re all set for summertime co*cktail parties!

Enjoy the elderflower liqueur (I know you will)!

More Elderflower Recipes

  • Elderflower Sparkling Mead
  • Elderflower Muffins with Honey
  • Wildflower Herbal Infusion Tea

Want to do more with your elderflower harvest? Here are 20+ Elderflower Recipes for cordial, liqueur, tea, jelly, cake + more!

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (6)

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5 from 15 votes

Elderflower Liqueur

Make this delicious elderflower liqueur when fresh elderflowers are in season!

Course Drinks

Cuisine American, European

Prep Time 30 minutes minutes

Infusing Time 14 days days

Total Time 30 minutes minutes

Servings 16 servings

Calories 42kcal

Author Colleen @ Grow Forage Cook Ferment

Ingredients

US Customary - Metric

  • 20-30 fresh elderflowers (dried elderflowers will also work)
  • 750 ml bottle vodka
  • 3 slices lemon
  • 1/4-1/2 cup honey or sugar (optional)

Instructions

  • Cut the elderflowers off the stem into a quart sized jar until it is almost full.

  • Pour the bottle of vodka over the elderflowers, then top with the slices of lemon to keep the flowers under the vodka.

  • Cover the jar with a lid and put it in a cool and dark place for 2-4 weeks.

  • Strain out the elderflowers with a fine mesh sieve, then add the optional honey or sugar and stir well or shake to combine.

  • It can be consumed right away or aged longer if desired. It will keep indefinitely.

Notes

If using dried elderflowers, fill the jar about halfway with dehydrated flowers.

Nutrition

Serving: 45ml | Calories: 42kcal | Carbohydrates: 1.6g | Sugar: 1.6g

Elderflower Liqueur Recipe: Homemade St. Germain (2024)

FAQs

What are the ingredients in St-Germain elderflower? ›

St-Germain is the world's first elderflower liqueur, made with hand-picked elderflower petals macerated in grape neutral spirit within 48 hours of being picked, sweetened with 180g sugar per litre, presented in its distinctive Belle Epoque-style bottle.

What is the shelf life of St-Germain elderflower liqueur? ›

How long does St‑Germain last? As a natural liqueur made with fresh flowers, the color may slowly change over time due to natural oxidation (caused by light and air). We recommend that you consume St~Germain liqueur within 6 months after opening, and keep your bottle in a dry, cool space and away from bright light.

Is elderflower liqueur the same as St-Germain? ›

Germain.

Can you drink St-Germain straight? ›

You can enjoy St Germain straight or over ice. It makes a great after-dinner drink, similar to Baily's Irish Cream.

What is the main flavoring in St-Germain liqueur? ›

St‑Germain is a French liqueur made with fresh elderflowers, hand-picked once a year in the late spring. To accomplish its exquisitely natural flavor, every bottle of St‑Germain contains up to 1,000 of the very best elderflower blossoms, resulting in a finely crafted, perfectly balanced and refined liqueur.

Does St-Germain have a lot of sugar? ›

St-Germain is considered a cordial, which is a sweetened distilled spirit that's typically high in sugar.

Can you drink St-Germain by itself? ›

At 20% ABV, St-Germain can be sipped on its own, ideally chilled, as an aperitif. It can also be enjoyed in the St-Germain co*cktail, sometimes called the St-Germain Spritz, which simply tops the liqueur with dry white wine or Champagne, club soda, and a lemon twist.

Can you freeze St-Germain? ›

Germain Elderflower Liqueur with fresh cucumber and lime juice, gin, rosemary simple syrup and orange bitters. It's one of my most sought after co*cktails. Get this, you can even freeze it and use it to layer a shot. The newbies in the co*cktail world 9–10 will start out mixing co*cktails with St.

What is the difference between elderberry and elderflower liqueur? ›

Elderflower has a woodsy and floral taste, and their sweetness comes out when elderflower is cooked. Photo courtesy of Shadi via Unsplash. Compared to elderflower, elderberry has a more intense taste: woodsy and floral, with a dark flavor that can be bitter and earthy when the fruit is consumed raw.

Why is elderflower so expensive? ›

It takes many pounds of flowers to produce a small amount of raw “liquor”. That is used to produce the flavoring used in cordials. Dried flowers are again smaller than the fresh, (all that water, you know) so it takes many flowers to make a pot of tea. If you take the flowers, there are no berries.

What does St-Germain pair well with? ›

St. Germain is an elderflower liqueur that makes it easy to add a sweet, floral taste to co*cktails. This versatile spirit mixes well with everything from Champagne and white wine to gin, vodka, and whiskey.

What is St-Germain the patron saint of? ›

Germaine was canonized as patron saint of people with disabilities and those who have been abused or abandoned.

Why is St-Germain so good? ›

The wild, natural sweetness of fresh, handpicked elderflowers gives St Germain a transformative flavour; indulgent, yet delicate with a fresh natural sweetness and notes of pear and honeysuckle.

Can you drink St-Germain on the Rocks? ›

Pour the St‑Germain, whisky and bitters into a mixing glass and fill with ice. Stir until very cold and perfectly diluted. Strain into a rocks glass filled with ice.

Is St-Germain sweet or dry? ›

St. Germain is a sweet liqueur that's flavored with elderflower, a flower that is used to make cordials, wine, and nonalcoholic drinks.

What is the chemical composition of elderflower? ›

elderflowers are cis-rose oxide, nerol oxide, hotrienol, and nonanal. Other compounds that contribute to the floral odour include linalool and α-terpineol, whereas hexanal and (Z)-3-hexenol add grassy odours.

What does elderflower do to the body? ›

An extract of the flower is used to make medicine. Elderflower is used for swollen sinuses (sinusitis), colds, influenza (flu), swine flu, bronchitis, diabetes, and constipation. It is also used to increase urine production (as a diuretic), to increase sweating (as a diaphoretic), and to stop bleeding.

Does elderflower have side effects? ›

Special Precautions and Warnings

Elderflower is POSSIBLY UNSAFE when used in excessive amounts. Some parts of the elder tree contain a cyanide-producing chemical which can cause nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Cooking removes this chemical.

What is elderflower made from? ›

Elderflower cordial is a soft drink made largely from a refined sugar and water solution and uses the flowers of the European elder (Sambucus nigra L.). Historically, the cordial was popular in Northwestern Europe where it has a Victorian heritage.

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