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Smells like coconut honey but tastes like bananas: Perthshire winery experiments with gorse bush flowers

Ron Gillies (Cairn O' Mohr) with some of his product alongside local gorse bushes on the Sidlaws, near Rait.
Ron Gillies (Cairn O' Mohr) with some of his product alongside local gorse bushes on the Sidlaws, near Rait.

A Tayside wine-maker hopes his unusual new recipe will prove to be a whin-win situation.

Amid fears that this year’s berry harvest might not be as fruitful as usual, bosses at the Cairn O’Mhor Winery were forced to come up with some new ideas for flavours.

And the solution was right on their doorstep.

Workers geared up with welders’ gloves and got stuck in to the prickly gorse bushes that grow wild around their Errol base.

They are using the bushes’ yellow whin flowers for a new batch of wines which are expected to be brought to the market next year.

Winery co-founder Ron Gillies said: “We always try to experiment with different ingredients, ever since we started about 35 years ago. This is something quite new for us, and it’s a brilliant resource.

“They have this very powerful aroma, like coconut honey, but they taste like bananas. There’s definitely something tropical about them.

“We made a small batch to try it out and it went down well. It might take a while for folk to get used to the taste, but I think people are more willing to try new things these days.

The idea was sparked by concerns about pickers not being able to come to Scotland to work on fruit farms.

Ron said his staff were used to dealing with gorse, because the elderberries they regularly use sometimes grows amongst the bush.

“It can be jaggy, but we often find ourselves climbing in and out of the gorse,” he said. “In my experience, you just get stuck in and keep moving forward. If you stop or try to go back, then you’re in trouble.”

Ron has warned that it could take a year for the whin wines to be ready. “People will have to be patient,” he said.

“But we hope they’ll find its worth the wait.”