Blackberry Liqueur (Crème de Mûre) Recipe – How to Make it at Home

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

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A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

"When the red star bleeds and the darkness gathers, Azor Ahai shall be born again amidst smoke and salt" - The Prince That Was Promised is a delicious Game of Thrones Cocktail inspired by the prophecy and those characters that may just be this promised saviour. Whoever you think will end up being The Prince That Was Promised, this Game of Thrones inspired Cocktail is sure to impress!

Want more cocktails? Click here!

If you couldn’t tell from all the recipes on my blog by now, I absolutely love making cocktails and playing with different spirits and flavours. This means I need to keep my bar* as fully stocked as I can, so I don’t limit my creativity. At least that’s what I tell myself when I’m spending a fortune on spirits, bitters, and the like! So, if I can make some of the staples at home with minimal effort and cost, I am SO on it.  This Crème de Mûre, or Blackberry Liqueur, is one of those!

*by bar, I mean a mess of many different bottles, poorly organised in a kitchen cupboard and a wine rack with bottles of gin instead of fine wines!

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

These totally fudgey, gooey, decadent Gluten Free Blackberry Brownies are the ultimate chocolate fix. The rich, fudgy chocolate combined with bursts of sweet wild blackberries will have you coming back for more. They're so easy to make, and no mixer is needed - so get your apron on and let's bake!

These Blackberry Brownies are a great way to bake with Blackberries

I’ve talked many times about how much I love blackberries and blackberry season in the UK – I pick so many wild blackberries in September that my freezer is busting with them. As well as baking delicious goodies with them, Homemade Blackberry Liqueur is one of my favourite ways to make good use of them! Just like jams, liqueur is a great way to preserve your season fruits to enjoy later in the year – and liqueur is a lot more fun that jam, so that’s what I go with.

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

As it is a crème liqueur,  this Blackberry Liqueur is very sweet and is traditionally enjoyed as a digestif. But Blackberry Liqueur also lends itself extremely well to cocktails – it is the key ingredient in classics such as the Bramble, a gin based cocktail for which I’ll be sharing my own take on with you soon! The Blackberry Liqueur/Crème de Mure is a great sub for Crème de Cassis (blackcurrant liqueur) in a Kir Royale too.

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

Like with most things that have been around forever, there are many, many recipes on the web for Blackberry Liqueur/Crème de Mûre and each one has the “right” way to make it and they can vary quite significantly. Some will tell you it has to be made with brandy, some will say vodka or gin, some will say ever clear. And while I am sure those methods all yield delicious results, I prefer the red wine method – I find this way you get a much richer flavour, and a more enjoyable drinking experience. Plus, there’s less time to wait until it’s ready for drinking – I’m a very impatient lady! You’ll want to choose a good quality red wine to make this Blackberry Liqueur, one that you would enjoy drinking by itself and medium bodied works best. I use a nice Merlot.

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

As I have already mentioned, making this Blackberry Liqueur or, Crème de Mûre, is very easy, has very little hands on time, and is ready for drinking in a couple of days. The flavours intensify over time though, so it’s great to make now and enjoy at Christmas time – it makes for a great homemade Christmas gift too if you can bear to give it away! So, let’s make some super easy DIY Blackberry Liqueur/Crème de Mûre.

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

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Homemade Blackberry Liqueur (Crème de Mûre)

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Yield 35 Fl Oz

A sweet and fruity homemade Blackberry Liqueur (also known as Crème de Mûre) that is so easy to make yourself with very little hands on time. The perfect way to use up all the blackberries the season has to offer! This easy homemade Blackberry Liqueur only gets better with time – so make up a big batch now to have the perfect homemade Christmas gifts on hand come December.

Ingredients

  • 5 cups (700g) blackberries, washed and de-stemmed
  • 1  bottle of red wine, medium bodied (standard 750ml size bottle)
  • 1.5 cups (300g) sugar
  • 1/2 cup (120ml) vodka or gin

Instructions

  1. Put the blackberries in a large glass or ceramic bowl and pour over the red wine. Use a potato masher to mash the berries and release the berries. 
  2. Cover with a clean towel and leave to macerate for 48 hours in a cool place* - give the berries a little mash every now and then if you remember!
  3. Strain through a wire mesh sieve to remove the berries, then strain again through cheese cloth to ensure all seeds etc are out. 
  4. Pour into a large saucepan and add the sugar. Bring to a gentle simmer on a medium heat, stirring until the sugar is dissolved. Simmer for 8 minutes. 
  5. Remove from heat and stir in the vodka or gin, and then leave to cool completely.
  6. Pour into clean, preferably sterilised, bottles. 
  7. Store in cool, dark place. It can be enjoyed immediately, but will keep almost indefinitely if in sterilised bottles - if not, then about a year. 

Notes

*I kept mine in our cloakroom as there are no windows to let in sunlight, there's a draft, and it's always cool. If you live in a hot climate and don't have a cool area of the house, then keep in the fridge.

 

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77 comments

  1. Jeff Focht says:

    This recipe sounds like just what I want for our blackberries. If I want the flavors to intensify, would I let all ingredients sit longer before straining, or let the final product sit longer before drinking?

          • Heather McLaughlin says:

            Hello! so, you are canning yours to make them shelf-stable (as in, not having to keep in the fridge)? Like, as in water bath canning? If so, how long are you putting them in the water bath for, and how do you know your acidity is high enough for proper preservation?

          • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

            Hi Heather
            I don’t actually can mine as I don’t have the equipment or knowledge to do so. I sterilise the bottles so it keeps for a long time unopened, it then lasts a couple of months in the fridge after opening.

            It absolutely can be canned to keep for much longer and I would follow your normal canning rules for that – I’m afraid I don’t have the knowledge to advise properly though

  2. Cherry says:

    I loved this recipe, however, I know that cooking fruit yields a cooked fruit taste. I’m interest in seeing how not cooking might effect the flavour. I’d be happy just to stir the sugar until it dissolves. Do I need to simmer it? Does the cooking step serve to help preserve it?

    • Michelle @ Giraffes Can Bake says:

      Hi Cherry, thank you for your message and kind words!

      Cooking the mixture will help the sugars dissolve and bring out the flavour – you could definitely try without the cooking step, although you may want to use a simple syrup in place of sugar as it may not dissolve well without cooking and you certainly don’t want a grainy texture! As for preserving it, simmering it definitely helps with preserving but it’s mainly the sugar and alcohol content that will do that job. However, I am no preserving expert so I couldn’t say for sure how important the role of heating the mixture is for that aspect!

      Do let me know how you get on if you give that method a go!

  3. Judy says:

    Easy, and delicious! I poured into 2 sterilized bottles, a pint and a quart. 2 weeks later, the pint is fine, but the quart has “froth” and seems to be fermenting. How can I stop the fermentation?

    • Michelle @ Giraffes Can Bake says:

      Hi Judy,

      So glad you liked the recipe!

      Hmm as for the fermentation, it may be that something got in there when you were bottling it or pouring it to drink! I’m afraid I’m not an expert on preserving food but I’d recommend decanting it temporarily and re-sterilising the bottle. Hope that helps a little!

      Thanks!
      Michelle

      • Judy says:

        I decanted, reheated, simmered again for 8 minute and resterilized and rebottled. It’s been a week and it seems fine. Thank you.

    • Michelle @ Giraffes Can Bake says:

      Hi Gaby,

      I’m afraid red wine is needed for creme de mure (however there are some recipes that don’t call for wine at all if you’re not able to use red wine – I know tannins can be a problem for a lot of people).
      Creme de mure is great added to white wine though!

      Enjoy!
      Michelle

  4. Tracey says:

    Thanks for the recipe. It’s really good. It was an absolute success so thank you. I made the bramble cocktail using the Sloe gin I made a few years ago and that has been a big hit with my husband. So off to make a second batch.

  5. Paul Kazmierski says:

    I filter thru cheese cloth- let set for a day. Then put a medium size strainer over a glass bowl, insert a coffee filter and pour one more time thru the filter. This makes for a much cleaner drink .

  6. Leah January says:

    I found a patch of wild blackberries and picked them until I could pick no longer. Brought them to my sister’s because that is who I cook with, most especially when trying a new recipe. We decided to try blackberry liqueur and I went online to find the perfect recipe. Yours was the first one I clicked on, where I was greeted with the picture of a bottle of your blackberry liqueur with a gift tag attached bearing my own name, Leah. Better yet, the name of the giver of the pictured bottle was Michelle, my own sister’s name, and your’s of course. Needless to say I did not search further, this is the recipe we will try. Now I am very curious to know if there is an actual Leah in your life Michelle, and what, if any relation she might be to you?

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Leah,

      That’s such an awesome coincidence, who knew blackberry Liqueur could be fate!

      Leah is the name of my best friend, so I chose her name for the gift tag photo! Unfortunately she lives across the Atlantic from me so she didn’t actually get a bottle!

      I hope that you and your Michelle enjoy the Liqueur!

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Chris,

      I’m not sure as I’ve not tried, sugar is quite important for longevity of the liqueur so if you use Stevia it may not keep as long and I would recommend you store it in the fridge. If you give it a go i’d love to know how it came out!

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Suzanne,

      I’ve not made it using frozen, but there’s no reason why frozen won’t work just as well! You may just need to defrost them first (but retain any liquid that seeps out while they defrost, there will be lots of good juices in there) or leave to macerate a little longer

      Enjoy!

  7. Alison says:

    I currently have my cheesecloth hanging and liquids oozing. Can’t wait to try out the final product. Out of interest, do you use the winey blackberries for anything after they’ve been strained?

  8. Lindsay says:

    I’m looking forward to making this! Have you tried this served in club soda? It sounds like it would taste great by itself. Thoughts?

  9. Ava F says:

    This is incredibly delicious and easy- just wondering if strawberries or blueberries have been tried instead if blackberries?

  10. Jan Lincoln says:

    I’ve made my first bottle of Crème de Mûre. Tasty, but very sweet. I may cut back a bit on the sugar next time, and there’ll be a next time!

    Question 1: simmering the wine & blackberry concoction evaporates the alcohol from the wine. I let it cool quite a bit before adding the vodka to conserve the alcohol. This liqueur is pretty low alcohol count, isn’t it?

    Question 2: since the liqueur is sweet do you let it replace the simple syrup in cocktails?

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Jan, yes it’s definitely very sweet – not something I can personally drink much of by itself. Would love to hear how using less sugar works out for you though

      To answer your questions – I’m not sure on the exact alcohol content of the final product, it’s hard to say how much of the alcohol actually evaporate when it is simmering, as you are simmering for only a short amount of time it should not lose that much alcohol. The alcohol content is probably around the 15% abv mark – but this is just an estimate

      And yes, I would usually omit any simple syrup when using creme de mure in a cocktail as it adds plenty of sweetness!

  11. Angela says:

    Hello,
    Is it important to cover with cloth vs the bowl’s lid? I live in a hot climate and plan to store the bowls in the fridge, it would be easier/safer for me to use the lid unless you are suggesting that it needs to breathe.

  12. Davide Simonetto says:

    Hi,

    Thanks for the recipy. I am tying it right now.
    I wanted to ask why you strain the blackberries before cooking them. Isn’t it better to extract the flawor to cook everything together and than strain it before storing it?

    Thanks

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Davide, the macerating pulls all of the juice and flavour out naturally before cooking – the berries are just fibre at the cooking point. However, there’s absolutely no reason you can’t strain after cooking, you just might get a slightly thicker liqueur

  13. Gladys says:

    Hi Michelle,
    I am trying this recipe for the first time and I have 2 questions. Would it be okay to add a stick of cinnamon and some cloves to the liqueur and would it be okay to use raw sugar? I can’t wait to try it!

  14. Ruth says:

    Hello, I followed the recipe and it turned out fantastic! Thank you so much. I am curious though, how did you come across the eight minutes simmer time. It seems like such a long time to simmer something that already had a lot of alcohol and sugar in it, if it’s purpose is for killing germs.

  15. Robert Bear says:

    Hi there
    I considering giving this a try as overwhelmed with blackberries!!!!
    Just wondered if using brown sugar would be ok, possibly better or unadvisable please?
    Thanks very much
    Regards
    Robert

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Robert – that sounds like my kind of problem!!

      I’ve not tried it with brown sugar, but it should work okay. The other flavours may be too strong to really notice much of a difference, but if anything it would have a richer. caramel taste which can’t be a bad thing!

      • Marlene says:

        I’m worried that heating the mixture will leave it virtually alcohol free. Would it be possible to simmer with just half the wine and add the rest of the wine later?

        • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

          Hi Marlene,

          A gentle simmer won’t remove all the alcohol, it will in fact remove very little – you’d have to boil it at a high heat for quite a while to remove all the alcohol. It’s not possible to add wine in two parts as all the wine needs to macerate with the berries.
          If you’re still worried however, you can simmer for a shorter period of time – just make sure all the sugar is dissolved completely

  16. Michael J. Simmons says:

    It’s amazing you’ve replied to every comment! Thank you.

    I’m only going to simmer a small amount of the wine berry mixture with my sugar, Might throw in a vanilla bean or a squeeze of lime or both.

    Have you tried any other alcohol? Brandy, rum, whiskey?

  17. June Anderson says:

    Hi I’m in the process of making this now and realise I’ve added the gin to the pan with the sugar and now simmering instead of adding when cooked, will it be okay?

  18. Barbara says:

    I did it and after a few days I see is splitting in two colors, like at the bottom and at the top, is this normal? like, I strained it 3 times since I didn’t want any particles in it, but now, since I close the lid in the sterilized jar, I’m letting it sit for about a month to try how develops the flavor, but I’m seeing is like splitting in two, might be the waiting? maybe shake it from time to time?
    Thanks for the recepie

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Barbara

      Apologies for the delay in replying to you!
      It’s not entirely unusual for it to split a little, this is normally due to a small amount of solids remaining after straining – can be hard to get rid of 100% of them without a professional filtration system! It shouldn’t affect the flavour or mouth feel – just give it a good shake before serving and you’ll be good to go!

  19. Gema S. says:

    Hi I have only available black raspberries near me, so I was wondering if I can boil them for a few minutes before adding the wine?
    I am afraid they are not clean enough after washing them with water. Let me know what are your thoughts about this. I really really want to try this recipe.

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Gemma,

      So sorry for my delayed reply, I didn’t see this come through.

      Black raspberries should work fine, will be a different flavour of course but I imagine it will taste great!
      I wouldn’t boil them, you will lose most of the juice and flavour if you do that. Washing them with cold water will be more than enough even just for eating, but the alcohol and then cooking later will also help kill off any bacteria!

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Jamie,

      There’s no reason you can’t leave them for little longer, although after a certain time leaving them longer will add no real benefit.

      But as long as they’re kept covered, in a cool place, and covered in the liquid then it’s fine to leave them longer!

  20. Karen says:

    Just completely read this wrong and poured all the ingredients in a bowl and started mashing, Will it be ok to leave for 2 days, then strain then simmer slowly possibly add a bit more gin then? Or have I ruined it?

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Don’t worry – that will be totally okay!

      Just give it a gentle simmer after the 48 hours, to help with sterilisation and make sure the sugar is all dissolved. You can add a little more gin at the end, only a little though or it might overwhelm the flavour – add a drop and give it a taste.

  21. Caleb says:

    Hi Michelle, I have some bottles of blackberry wine. Do you think I could use those in place of the red wine? Or would the recipe need to be altered a bit?

  22. ayisha says:

    can i soak the blackberries for less than 48 hours? i wanted to make this for tomorrow but didnt realize i had to soak it for so long

  23. Ashlee says:

    Hi, i accidentally left for 4 days and a film appeared on top. Is it safe to continue the process and drink? Or could it be growing something?

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hi Ashlee,

      It’s hard to say for sure without seeing it, but if you left it in the fridge it should be fine.

      The film could just be air bubbles rising to the surface as it may have started to ferment a little, you can just skim it off the top. But if it looks like something more than just air bubbles I’d probably err on the side of caution and not use them as you don’t want to get sick from them, and the liqueur wouldn’t last as long if it’s contaminated.

      I’m not an expert in preserving but if it’s been covered in the fridge then the only issue should be the fruit will have turned to mush, which isn’t a problem for this recipe!

  24. Krystle Marshall says:

    Hey!!! I’ve just made it and just wondering- do you know the strength/percentage of the liqueur once it’s done?

    • Michelle @ A Tipsy Giraffe says:

      Hey, hope you like it!

      I’m not sure on the ABV I’m afraid. I think you need to work out how much alcohol is in the recipe, then calculate the ABV based on that and the total volume of the final product. There are calculators online but I don’t know how easy they are to us (or how accurate!)

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