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Wine Slushies Made Two Ways For Summer Refreshment

wine slushies in mason jars red and white

Meet your new go-to summer beverage. The wine slushy! At Snow Farm Vineyard & Distillery, our slushy machine is super popular in the summer, but you can easily make wine slushies at home too. 

You only need two to three ingredients: red or white wine, strawberry daiquiri or piña colada mix, and fresh or frozen fruit (fruit is optional). Below are two different ways to make slushies. You can make them either in the freezer or in the blender. 

Enjoy a wine slushy, and you’ll instantly feel like you’re at our vineyard in the Champlain Islands on a warm summer day!

red wine slushy

Wine Slushies: The Freezer Method

If you don’t have a blender, or if you want to prep your wine slushy in advance to enjoy later, you can combine the ingredients in a pitcher and put it in the freezer. Done!

It will take about 4-5 hours to freeze and become slushy-like. At that point, you can take it out, stir it up, and enjoy it. Or, you can leave it in the freezer until you’re ready to thaw it enough to drink. This can be days or even a week later.

I left mine in the freezer for a week before drinking it, and it was perfect. It’s a good way to use up an open bottle of wine that you aren’t sure you’re going to finish immediately.

When you’re ready to enjoy your slushy, take it out of the freezer and let it thaw for 20-30 minutes, and you’re good to go!

red and white wine slushies in a pitcher and mason jar

Wine Slushies: The Blender Method

For a faster wine slushy, you can use a blender to combine the ingredients with ice, and you won’t have to wait for the slushy to freeze. 

The ice will dilute the wine a little bit, so if you’re looking for a less alcoholic drink, you can use this method over the freezer method. Your wine slushy will also be fruitier using a blender because you can add in frozen fruit.

Will Freezing Wine Change the Flavor or Alcohol Content?

The alcohol content won’t change when you freeze wine and in most cases, the flavor won’t change either.

The only thing to watch out for when freezing wine is how much it expands. If you don’t freeze it in a large enough container – it will expand and could break your container. When you’re making a wine slushy you want to use a large pitcher or a mason jar with at least an inch to expand.

Now, what are you waiting for? Let’s get you a wine slushy!

Strawberry Wine Slushy

Ingredients: 
1 bottle red wine with berry notes like Leon Millot
1/4 cup strawberry daiquiri mix

Directions to make in the freezer:
Mix the wine and the daiquiri mix together and freeze for 4-5 hours. It will be the consistency of a slushy when you stir it up. If freezing for longer, you’ll need to let it thaw for 20-30 minutes before you can drink it. Stir and enjoy!

Directions to make in a blender with frozen fruit and ice: 
If you’d like a fruity and faster version, mix the wine, daiquiri mix, 3-4 cups of fresh or frozen strawberries, and 2 cups of ice in a blender. Note: if you don’t have a large blender, you may need to blend the ingredients in batches because it may not all fit. 

Piña Colada Wine Slushy

Ingredients:
1 bottle of fruity white wine like Naked Mermaid
1/4 cup piña colada mix

Directions to make in the freezer:
Mix the wine and the daiquiri mix together and freeze for 4-5 hours. It will be the consistency of a slushy when you stir it up. If freezing for longer, you’ll need to let it thaw for 20-30 minutes before you can drink it. Stir and enjoy!

Directions to make in a blender with frozen fruit and ice:
If you’d like a fruity and faster version, mix the wine, daiquiri mix, 4-5 cups of fresh or frozen pineapple, and 2 cups of ice in a blender. Note: if you don’t have a large blender, you may need to blend the ingredients in batches because it may not all fit. 

Enjoy and we hope to see you soon in the Islands!

5 Reasons to Buy Local Wine Made in Vermont

Creative Wine cocktails Pet Nat Snow Farm Vineyard

There is a growing appreciation culturally for local food and drink including craft beers, wines, meats, cheeses, and more. In Vermont, one challenge for local wine is name recognition. Popular warm-weather varieties like Pinot Noir and Cabernet typically can’t be made locally in Vermont because the grapes can’t survive the hard winters.

Instead, varieties like Frontenac, Louise Swenson, and Vidal Blanc are prevalent in Vermont and across the Northeast. They thrive in the cold weather and like a lot of Vermonters themselves, their ability to triumphantly emerge after a tough winter makes them something to admire. 

The cold-hardy grape varietals used to make local wine in Vermont are steadily gaining in popularity. People are realizing that local wine gives them the same enjoyment and taste profile as more well-known wines shipped from across the country, but with a lot of other added benefits too. 

Vermont-made local wines from Snow Farm Vineyard in South Hero, Vermont

There is a Local Wine for Every Taste & Price Point

It is becoming increasingly popular to buy local wine in Vermont. Why? Because the quality of the wine, the prices, and the varieties available have all gotten better over the years.

There is a growing recognition that small Vermont vineyards have an immense advantage over large ones when it comes to making high-quality products. The care and attention given to each bottle, from the labels applied by hand to the seasonal flavors, make local wine stand out.

If you’re still thinking you can’t give up your Pinot Noir, think again. Vermont wines from Snow Farm Vineyard offer you eight of the nine common styles of wine. Check out this blog post to find the style of wine you like with a recommendation for local Vermont wine you’d like!

Vermont wines do tend to be slightly more expensive than cheaper wines from, say, California because of higher production costs (wines are made in smaller batches in Vermont). Yet, over time, the prices have become comparable, and, again, you are paying for small-batch Vermont quality.

vermont vineyard things to do in vermont

You're Supporting The Local Economy

When commercial winemaking began in Vermont in the mid-1990s, there were only three vineyards: Snow Farm Vineyard, Boyden Valley Winery, and Shelburne Vinyard.

Today, there are dozens of wineries in Vermont that make wine with local grapes and other local fruits, as well as local honey and maple syrup.

Most of them are family-owned and operated, and many are taking it to the next level with new locations and cutting-edge winemaking techniques.

For example, many, including Snow Farm Vineyard, are now making an all-natural sparkling wine called Pét-nat

As Vermont wineries begin to be recognized as some of the best in the nation, local customers are beginning to realize just how good their local wine is and are taking advantage of it. This allows families and local businesses to thrive doing the work they love.

Vermont-made wines from Snow Farm Vineyard in South Hero, Vermont

Local Wines Are More Sustainable

While you might be tempted to purchase your wine from the big fancy wineries that are found in places like Napa or Sonoma County, buying wine from your own state is more sustainable.

When you buy local wine, there are fewer greenhouse gas emissions created from shipping the wine across the country or globe.

You’re also supporting healthy land practices in your backyard. Vineyards sequester carbon and improve soil health by keeping land thriving and green with plants.

At Snow Farm Vineyard, a large part of the land is conserved and can never be developed. The public can also enjoy self-guided walking tours through the vineyard, and the Fox Hill hike for stunning views of Lake Champlain.

You'll Impress Your Friends With Your Grape Knowledge

As you try more local wines, you’ll become familiar with the flavor profiles and will be able to use your Vermont wine lingo with even the most sophisticated Vermont wine connoisseurs.

Here are a few terms to know!

Ice Wine: The Northern U.S. is one of the few places in the world where ice wine, a dessert wine, can be made. It starts with harvesting Vidal Blanc grapes after they’ve frozen on the vine and the sugar has concentrated in them. Because they’re rare and full of exotic flavors, ice wines are sipping wines to be enjoyed alone or with decadent desserts. 

Pét-Nat: Unlike champagne which goes through several fermentations and takes over a year to make, Pét-nat is bottled after only a few weeks during its first natural fermentation. What makes it truly special is that, unlike champagne, there is nothing added to it. It is the most natural, untouched form of winemaking.

Marquette: This grape is a Pinot Noir hybrid that was introduced in 2006. It produces a medium-body complex red wine with flavors of cherry, blackberry, and subtle oak flavors. It ages well and pairs with red meat, turkey, or roasted butternut squash. 

Frontenac Gris: Frontenac Gris grapes can be used to make a variety of white wines. At Snow Farm Vineyard, we make a Frontenac Gris Rosé. It is a refreshing, off-dry wine lightly infused with aronia berries with fruity aromas of tart strawberry on the nose. 

vermont wineries local wine

Local Wine Gives You a Taste of Place 

The saying is, ‘Things that grow together go together.’ When you’re tasting local wine, you’re tasting the terroir, or the climate, soil, and regional differences that create the flavors. That same terroir also influences the meats, vegetables, fruits, and dairy you eat too.

When you have a bit of local cheese with some fresh apples and wine, their flavors go together because they’re grown together. 

Stop in to Snow Farm Winery & Vineyard in South Hero today to try our local wines and walk the vineyard. You can also order our wines online and find them in stores across Vermont.