torilen
Well-Known Member
I wanted to see if it was possible to make something that tasted like Frangelico at home. Sure enough, it is. I only made 3 cups worth. It was basically like making a hard root beer.
I should have written it down, but if I remember correctly, it was something like this.
2 cups of water with 1 cups of sugar - bring it to a boil, add the hazelnut extract, let it cool, and ferment it like you would a wine.
It has been fermenting for almost a full 2 weeks, and doesn't seem to be slowing much. It is a slow fermentation, but it is still going good. Because it was only 2 cups of water, I believe the possible ABV is up around 18% or 20%, if the yeast will let it go that high (I used ec-1118 - so in theory, yes).
Does it taste like Frangelico? Yes. It does not have that creaminess that real Frangelico has, but the taste is pretty spot on. Can you mix it with anything? I do not know yet. I would assume you can mix it with hard liquor, but as for putting in milk or something like that...I don't know, and I don't think so. I tried putting milk into a coffee wine I made one time, and it curdled immediately. Too much acid, I think. Though, you can add Irish Cream to coffee wine...it gets thick, but doesn't curdle completely, so it is still drinkable.
I should have written it down, but if I remember correctly, it was something like this.
2 cups of water with 1 cups of sugar - bring it to a boil, add the hazelnut extract, let it cool, and ferment it like you would a wine.
It has been fermenting for almost a full 2 weeks, and doesn't seem to be slowing much. It is a slow fermentation, but it is still going good. Because it was only 2 cups of water, I believe the possible ABV is up around 18% or 20%, if the yeast will let it go that high (I used ec-1118 - so in theory, yes).
Does it taste like Frangelico? Yes. It does not have that creaminess that real Frangelico has, but the taste is pretty spot on. Can you mix it with anything? I do not know yet. I would assume you can mix it with hard liquor, but as for putting in milk or something like that...I don't know, and I don't think so. I tried putting milk into a coffee wine I made one time, and it curdled immediately. Too much acid, I think. Though, you can add Irish Cream to coffee wine...it gets thick, but doesn't curdle completely, so it is still drinkable.