So, having been inspired by writing about Christmas drinks past I thought I'd post very briefly about the beginnings of my new project.
Having read on the great Food52 about the rather delicious sounding Butternut Squash 5-spice Liqueur, I had a quick look around my kitchen and realised I had all the ingredients to make something vaguely similar myself. I had a knobbly little pumpkin we got from the nice biodynamic fruit & veg stall at the Crew's Hill Farmers' Market last week and had forgotten about, some left over mulling syrup (see below for the recipe) in the fridge and about quarter of a bottle of vanilla vodka - an excellent start.
I chopped up the pumpkin into roughly inch square pieces and put them in a roasting dish with 5 whole cloves, a cinnamon stick and a red chilli then roasted them in a medium oven for about 40 minutes until they were soft but not falling apart.
Into a nice big Kilner jar the whole lot went, topped up with a 700ml bottle of plain Absolut vodka and about 80ml of the vanilla Absolut for good measure.
All I need to do now is wait patiently for 2-3 weeks, drain the vodka, add the mulling syrup & with any luck a new seasonal liqueur will be born. Watch this space...
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Festive drinks – alcoholic & otherwise (but mostly alcoholic)
Mulled
cider / wine
Every year I
make mulled cider on Guy Fawkes’ Night (5th November). I’m not keen on the whole
burning-effigy-of-a-person aspect of the evening but love absolutely everything
else. We have lots of people round, grill up a vast amount of sausages
& corn on the cob, provide some roughly cut up baguettes in lieu of plates
or cutlery and most importantly there’s the mulled cider. All this serves to stoke the boilers before we
head out into the cold to watch fireworks and play with sparklers and
fire. I generally make a smaller pan of mulled
apple juice for children & drivers too – just as tasty, not quite as fun.
Very simply,
mulling cider, wine or juice goes like this (assuming three litres of chosen
beverage):
NB: if you are mulling red wine, I would go
with a solution of 3 parts wine to 1 part orange juice but that’s just me –
most people use the wine neat.
Start with a
decent cider – it doesn’t have to be the expensive artisanal stuff but if you use
Diamond White or Brain-Death-Thunder (or whatever it’s called) it is going to
taste like you did, so don’t. Fill a large pan with the cider and add some soft
brown sugar, more than you think you should (for 3 litres of cider for example
I would use 5-6 tablespoons) as both cider & wine lose their sweetness when
heated. To the pan add 5-6 whole cinnamon
sticks, at least 10 whole cloves (I use more because I like it spicy), some
whole star anise, whole mace, the zest of an orange and some all spice
berries. Warm the mixture through but make sure not to simmer or boil (doing so will evaporate the alcohol & we don’t want
that!) then switch it off, cover & leave for a few hours to steep. Switch the heat back on half an hour or so before
people arrive so the warm spicy smell fills the kitchen and keep the pan warm on a low
heat. I like to add thinly sliced apple
and / or orange just because it’s pretty.
It’s worth
noting that there is always some left over (as I generally make far too much)
and it is very nice chilled too – lightly spicy & refreshing.
Child-friendly mulled apple juice |
Mulling
syrup
If you can’t
be bothered spending hours mulling your cider / wine and don’t want to use
those little teabag type things you can get for the purpose, you can make a
mulling syrup and use it as & when you fancy. It is particularly useful if you just want to
make one or two glasses rather than a whole batch – warm through a little wine
or cider, add your syrup & stir.
- 250g caster or granulated sugar
- 2 oranges, halved
- 6 whole cloves
- 6 whole allspice
- 2 cinnamon sticks
- ¼ nutmeg , freshly grated
- small piece ginger, sliced
- Put all the ingredients into a saucepan with 1 litre water and bring slowly to a simmer, making sure all the sugar has been completely dissolved. Turn down the heat and simmer for 20 mins. Leave to cool, then strain through a very fine sieve.
- Sterilise your bottles by washing them in hot soapy water, rinsing well, then drying them in a warm oven. Meanwhile, rewarm the syrup until just hot, then pour into the bottles while still hot and seal.
Christmas
spirits
Last year I had a go at infusing spirits, having sampled & enjoyed many such things in Italy, France & Spain. I
wanted to start simply so came up with two very basic recipes: a vodka-based digestif and a spiced rum for
exciting Christmas cocktails. They were
incredibly quick & simple to make (though patience is required for the steeping time) and looked very pretty as stocking
fillers.
The most
important thing is to start with fairly reliable spirits. What you end up with is an infusion rather
than a sweet, heavily flavoured liqueur so the base spirit has got to be
pleasant enough to sip on its own or in a cocktail. The method could not be simpler – you choose
your flavours, add them to the base and wait for six weeks. Voila.
Digestif - As a digestif is intended to
be served after a meal in order to aid digestion, it seemed sensible to use
herbs that perform that function naturally in my infusion. In this case I used fennel (seeds and fronds)
and aniseed.
Spiced rum – Some curls of orange zest
very carefully cleaned of all bitter pith, cloves and cinnamon went into this
and made some very good aromatic cocktails. It was also delicious added in a very small quantity
to a lightly sweetened hot milk at bedtime. I have found recently that it also makes excellent hot buttered rum!
The finished product |
Pretty stocking fillers |
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