Plum Wine (Umeshu) or Japanese Liqueur Recipe | Cooking with Nart (2024)

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🌸🥃 Japanese Plum Wine or Liqueur / Umeshuoffers delightful sweet and tangy flavors with the fruity fragrance of ume plums. Not only can you drink the wine, but you can also eat the plums, use them as a garnish or even part of desserts! Requiring only 3 ingredients, this drink is very easy to make. It's perfect for parties and as a homemade gift for your loved ones! 🌸🥃

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What Is Japanese Plum Wine or Liqueur (Umeshu)?

Umeshu is a Japanese plum wine or liqueur made by steeping green ume (Japanese plums) in white liquor and rock sugar. When I first saw fresh, unripe ume plums in a store, it was 55 baht a kg which was not bad at all. I immediately thought about making this Japanese plum liquor because this drink had been popular among Thai people for quite some time.

I’d never really understood what the craze was all about until I finally opened my first bottle of CHOYA Umeshu. Since then I’ve been making the drink most times the plums are in season. Boy...when you miss a little, you miss a lot!

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What Does Umeshu Taste Like?

While umeshu is generally referred to as Japanese plum wine in English, I wouldn't say it tastes like wine at all. It’s got a bit of tartness in it from the unripe plums, but overall it’s on the sweeter side of things. In my opinion, it's actually more like a liqueur than a wine. Although you can enjoy umeshu on its own with ice, it's also great with soda water and when used to as part of other drinks or co*cktails. As much as this might shock the whole Japanese population, I sometimes enjoy mine with Sprite or Lipton lemon iced tea.

Call me weird all you want. 😁

Can You Eat The Plums In The Plum Wine?

Of course, you can! And by the time your drink is ready, the plums won't be sour anymore because they've been steeped in liquid with sugar for so long. They actually taste quite good and make for a great garnish as well. If you fancy, you can also use them to make jam or in desserts.

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Ingredients

This recipe makes about 60 fluid ounces or 1.8 liters. What you will need are:

  • 2.2 pounds or 1 kilogram of unripe Japanese ume plums
  • 1.1 pounds or 500 grams of rock sugar
  • 60 fluid ounces or 1.8 liters of shochu (not to be confused with the Korean soju!) or a white liquor like a flavorless vodka

Notes About The Alcoholic Beverage

When it comes to your choice of an alcoholic beverage, ideally, you want to use shochu (a Japanese distilled beverage). However, if you can’t find it, you can use a white liquor like flavorless vodka. I’ve tried making umeshu with vodka before and it was great. Though in the pictures in this post, I used a Thai rice whiskey (Lao Khao or เหล้าขาว) which, similar to shochu, is a rice distilled beverage. There are many brands of Thai rice whiskey but most of them are easy to find and inexpensive - SO MUCH cheaper than vodka. But whatever white liquor you choose to go with, make sure that it’s 35%-40% alcohol.

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Where Can I Find Ume Plums?

I can probably only speak for Thailand since it's where I live. Here, ume is grown up in the mountains in the Northern part of the country where it's cooler. The plums are in season in March-April. You can normally find these Japanese green plums at the Royal Project stores. But if you're anything like me now, you make friends with some hill tribe people and order these Japanese green plums straight from their farm to your house! The season of this fruit seems to vary in different places, though. In Japan, it's said to be June-July, while in California, it's May-June. If you love or are interested in making Japanese plum wine, you'll need to see if you can find the plums and when their season is in your part of the world.

Why Use Rock Sugar?

Rock sugar takes longer than the normal granulated sugar to dissolve, which means it helps to slowly extract the flavors and fragrance of the plums. In a nutshell, it will give your drink a fruitier aroma and a stronger taste of the ume plums than other types of sugar. If you can't find this in your local store, you can get rock sugaron Amazon.


Instructions

Making this Japanese plum wine is a piece of cake. You don’t need to have a lot of skills, just three ingredients, which are green ume plums, rock sugar, and shochu. Along with those you want to have a large glass jar with a lid that can be closed tightly. And more importantly, some patience…because you have to wait for at least 6 months for this drink to be ready. Good things take time!

So here's the method:

1. Rinse the plums and soak in clean water for 2 hours.

2. Thoroughly dry the plums with a towel and pick out the stems with a toothpick.

3. In a large glass jar, place a layer of the plums and cover them with a layer of rock sugar. Repeat the process with the remaining plums and sugar. You can use more than one jar, but make sure the sugar is half the weight of the plums in each jar.

4. Pour the liquor into the jar. You want the liquid to be a little bit above the plums.

5. Close the lid tightly and store the jar in a cool and dark place for at least 6 months. After 6 months, your umeshu is ready to drink!

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Storing Opened Plum Wine

What's so good about this Japanese plum liqueur is that it doesn't really expire! Not only can you steep the plums for however longer than 6 months you want before you open it, but you can also keep the drink on your shelf and take as much time as you need to enjoy it. As we're using a beverage that is 40% ABV to soak the plums, this will help prevent them from rotting.

They also say the longer you steep the plums, the better the umeshu tastes. I've tried 2 years and it was AMAZING. If you make many batches at a time, it's easier to try soaking the plums for longer and see the difference in the taste. 🙂

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Occasions This Drink Is Great For

You probably don’t need me to tell you this, but the Japanese plum wine is so great for parties! New Year’s, birthday, housewarming – you name it! It’s good for all. Since the ume season isn't that long, you can make large batches each time so it lasts you a while. And if you know anyone who likes this drink, you can also give it to them as a gift when it's ready. They’re going to LOVE the homemade version!

Other Recipes You Might Enjoy:

  • Raspberry Lime Vodka co*cktail
  • Butterfly Pea Milk
  • Fresh Peach Lemonade
  • Nom Yen (Thai Pink Milk)
  • Mixed Berry Smoothie
  • Cha Yen (Thai Iced Tea)
  • Butterfly Pea Tea (Blue Tea)

📖 Recipe

Plum Wine (Umeshu) or Japanese Liqueur Recipe | Cooking with Nart (10)

Plum Wine or Liqueur (Umeshu) Recipe

🌸🥃Umeshu is a Japanese plum wine or liqueur that offers delightful sweet and tangy flavors with the fruity fragrance of ume plums. Not only can you drink the wine, but you can also eat the plums, use them as a garnish or even part of desserts! Requiring only 3 ingredients, this drink is very easy to make. It's perfect for parties and as a homemade gift for your loved ones! 🌸🥃

5 from 20 votes

Print Rate

Course: Drinks

Cuisine: Japanese

Prep Time: 40 minutes minutes

Resting Time: 180 days days

Total Time: 180 days days 40 minutes minutes

Servings: 1 .8 liters

Author: Nart

Ingredients

  • 2.2 pounds unripe Japanese ume plums
  • 1.1 pounds rock sugar
  • 60 fluid ounces shochu not to be confused with the Korean soju! or a white liquor like a flavorless vodka

US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Rinse the plums and soak in clean water for 2 hours.

  • Thoroughly dry the plums with a towel and pick out the stems with a toothpick.

  • In a large glass jar, place a layer of the plums and cover them with a layer of rock sugar. Repeat the process with the remaining plums and sugar. You can use more than one jar, but make sure the sugar is half the weight of the plums in each jar.

  • Pour the liquor into the jar. You want the liquid to be a little bit above the plums.

  • Close the lid tightly and store the jar in a cool and dark place for at least 6 months. After 6 months, your umeshu is ready to drink!

Notes

You can steep the plums for years. They say the longer, the better the umeshu!

Tried this recipe?Mention @cookingwithnart or tag #cookingwithnart!

Plum Wine (Umeshu) or Japanese Liqueur Recipe | Cooking with Nart (2024)

FAQs

What do you mix with Japanese plum wine? ›

Umeshu Sour (梅酒サワー): Mix the plum wine with ume-flavor shochu and soda water. Umeshu Tonic (梅酒トニック) Mix 30 ml plum wine with 90 ml tonic water. Umeshu Soda (梅酒ソーダ割り): Mix one part plum wine with one part carbonated water.

What do you do with Japanese plum wine? ›

Enjoy plum wine neat, on the rocks, or in a simple highball. However, the sweet and sour plum liqueur works well as a replacement for vermouth and can thus also be used in co*cktails.

What is the popular Japanese umeshu wine Flavoured with? ›

Umeshu (梅酒) is a Japanese liqueur made by steeping ume plums (while still unripe and green) in liquor (焼酎, shōchū) and sugar. It has a sweet, sour taste, and an alcohol content of 10–15%.

What does umeshu go well with? ›

Because straight umeshu has such little water, it pairs best with snacks that are also low in water content. Think dry, densely flavoured foods like cheese, nuts, and beef jerky. Also, keep in mind that straight umeshu is a compact, powerful flavour bomb of fruitiness and tartness.

Do you refrigerate Japanese plum wine? ›

After you open a bottle or carton of plum wine, it's best to store it in the refrigerator. The cold temperatures will slow down the rate of deterioration and keep it tasting fresh longer. Even so, we recommend consuming carton plum wine within 6 months, and bottled plum wine within 1 year.

Does umeshu need to be refrigerated? ›

Refrigerate after Opening

Refrigeration helps to slow down the oxidation process that occurs when air comes into contact with the liqueur, preserving its flavors for longer. Umeshu can last up longer in the refrigerator if stored properly. CHOYA recommends to finish drinking it within a couple months after opening.

How is plum wine traditionally served? ›

How To Drink Japanese Plum Wine. Plum wine is known for being very versatile when it comes to its drinking methods. It can be served at all temperatures, on the rocks, with soda water, tonic water, slightly diluted with water, and even with tea.

Is umeshu a wine or liqueur? ›

Umeshu is a traditional Japanese liqueur made from Ume fruit, sugar and alcohol. Unlike wine, which is made by fermenting fruits, Umeshu is made using a different production process and is typically based on cane spirits (shochu).

What is the difference between Umeboshi and umeshu? ›

Umeshu, for example, is a traditional plum liqueur made from green fruit, while umeboshi is made from ripe fruit.

Is plum sake the same as umeshu? ›

In fact, ume has higher acidic content than plums and is more sour than its Western counterparts so it is usually pickled or preserved. If this is a bit confusing, don't worry, as the terms “plum wine” or “plum sake” are widely accepted and synonymous with each other to describe umeshu.

What is a good Japanese plum wine? ›

Choya plum wine is produced to an original Japanese recipe by steeping green plums in shochu, which is typically distilled from barley or rice. The taste is pleasantly sweet, slightly floral and fruity. Perfect served chilled or as a plum wine spritzer.

How long does umeshu last unopened? ›

Umeshu is not actually wine

As umeshu is a distilled alcohol, it does not have an expiry date and can be stored after opening without affecting the taste.

Do you eat the plum in umeshu? ›

This sweet, fruity liquor is super easy to make, requires few ingredients, and when it's ready to drink, you can eat the plums, too! It's terrific on its own, on the rocks, or mixed with a little sake or sochu.

Is umeshu high in alcohol? ›

Unlike wine, umeshu doesn't feature fermented grapes, but is made with a base alcohol, plums, and sugar. This is why you will often see plums bobbing around inside the bottle. Most umeshu have an alcohol level between 10-15%, although this can be higher.

What goes well with umeboshi? ›

Umeboshi is also commonly served in Japan as a condiment with rice, or tucked inside a rice ball wrapped with nori. In the summer, thick cucumber rounds spread thinly with umeboshi paste are a cooling treat. Sparingly spread on cooked sweet corn, it is a delicious, healthful alternative to butter and salt.

How do you dilute plum wine? ›

Add water if you want your wine to be less sweet.

While some people like to drink plum wine on the rocks without diluting it, others prefer to add water. Adding water will dilute the very sweet taste of the wine. Ultimately, the amount of water you add depends on you.

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