Authors: Andrew Schloss
Tags: #liquor, #cofee, #home cocktails, #cocktails, #liqueurs, #popular liqueurs, #spirits, #creamy, #kahlua, #unsweetened infused, #flavored alcohol, #bar recipes, #sweetners, #distilled, #herbal, #nutty, #creative coctails, #flowery, #infused spirits, #clones, #flavorings, #margarita, #home bar, #recipes, #cointreau, #cocktail recipes, #alcohol, #caramel, #homemade liqueurs, #fruity, #flavoring alcohol
Mint is the veritable flavor of fresh. Just try finding a mainstream toothpaste flavored with anything else. One would think that you couldn’t get fresher than mint-scented liqueur, but pairing mint with cucumber raises the freshness ante exponentially. In liqueurs, mint can taste candied. Tying it to the bright crispness of cucumber eliminates any candy connection, leaving you as refreshed as a walk in a mentholated garden.
Makes about 1 quart
Skål!
Invigorate a Bloody Mary, brighten up gin in a Mint and Soda, pictured, (
page 255
), or mentholate the standard Cucumber Martini (pages
247
and
248
).
Artichokes have the disturbing quality of making anything eaten after them taste artificially sweet, as if the food had been dusted with saccharin. The culprit is cynarin, a phenolic compound that inhibits the sweet receptors in our taste buds. When the chemical is swept off the tongue by a bite of a different food, the receptors reignite and we taste the difference.
The same phenols make raw artichokes taste bitter and astringent, qualities that disappear when they are cooked but that are exacerbated when tincturing raw artichokes in alcohol. Decidedly astringent and bitter, artichoke liqueur is a potent digestif.
Makes about 1 quart
Sláinte!
Sip straight up or on the rocks after a large meal. Or any meal.
Vegetables employ bitterness for defense, to discourage animals from eating them. Farmers have tried for centuries to diminish the bitter alkaloids in such vegetables as eggplant, cucumbers, and cabbages, but in some vegetables, bitterness is prized, as is the case with radicchio and other chicories. The liqueurs that contain these alkaloids are renowned for their ability to aid digestion and improve general health.
Campari is a classic Italian digestive liqueur blended from multiple herbs. It has a bright carmine color, traditionally derived from the shells of cochineal insects. No need for bugs in our version, in which rose-hued radicchio produces a beautiful magenta tint. The round Chioggia heads are the most commonly available.
Makes about 1 quart
Cheers!
Makes a radical Negroni.
Sweetness and heat are companions and competitors, vying for your attention in an endless cycle of pain and relief. In most recipes the two are kept separate, but when forced to share, they can be a raucous culinary couple. This liqueur is a case in point. Made from tequila infused with chiles and sweetened with agave, its perfume arises from an earthy influx of toasted cumin and the volatile aromatic oils in the chiles you choose — woody ancho, floral guajillo, meaty habanero, or acidic pequin.
Capturing those aromas in the alcohol goes hand in hand with the ascendency of heat in the liqueur. In taking time for the aromas to build, you run the risk of producing a tincture of incendiary power. I suggest tasting after a day and deciding how much longer your palate can stand.
Makes about 1 quart
L’chaim!
Makes an awesome Bloody Maria (
page 241
) and a three-alarm Flaming Lemonade (
page 244
).
Fresh corn is as sweet as any apple or berry, and yet we barely think of it as a sweet ingredient. Since the 1960s, the fresh corn market has been dominated by super-sweet varieties that are about 40 percent sugar and only 5 percent starch, making them perfect for liqueurs, especially when using a corn-based liquor like bourbon for your base. This delightful spirit has a silky mouthfeel and a natural sweetness that makes it decidedly easy to drink.
Makes about 1 quart
Santé!
Use it in a Bourbon Milk Punch (
page 239
) or a Kiss on the Lips (1 part bourbon and 3 parts apricot nectar).
If you could rarify gazpacho, ridding it of its crunchy chunks and infusing its essence into a potable spirit, you would have Red Lightning. Spicy and garden fresh, this is a truly delicious concoction. Drink it over ice as shown, or use it as a base for a Bloody Mary or a vegetable Margarita.
Makes about 1 quart
Salut!
Mix up a Red Skies at Night (
page 242
).
Intensely flavored yet barely there, tomato water, an extract of tomatoes and salt, became the darling of four-star chefs across the country in the mid-1990s. Like most food fads, it appeared everywhere for a while and then it vanished. Today it resurfaces occasionally, mostly as a tool of mixologists, which is right where we want it.
The process of making tomato water (chopping up a pile of tomatoes, salting them, wrapping them in cheesecloth, and waiting for gravity to extract their essence) is made far more efficient by replacing gravity with alcohol. When it comes to flavor, the attracting power of alcohol far exceeds Newton’s favorite force. The resulting liqueur is almost clear but intensely tomatoey.
Makes about 1 quart
Prost!
Serve chilled in a rarified Bloody Mary or mix up a Niçoise (
page 252
).