Homemade Liqueurs and Infused Spirits: Innovative Flavor Combinations, Plus Homemade Versions of Kahlúa, Cointreau, and Other Popular Liqueurs (24 page)

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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

BOOK: Homemade Liqueurs and Infused Spirits: Innovative Flavor Combinations, Plus Homemade Versions of Kahlúa, Cointreau, and Other Popular Liqueurs
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Apple Sour Cream

Decades ago, when I was a chef in a small boutique restaurant in Philadelphia, our most popular dessert was a deep-dish apple–sour cream pie with a walnut streusel topping. This liqueur is the liquid incarnation of that sublime creation. Tangy and rich, mildly fruity, and zanily nutty — its pleasures just don’t stop. Everyone I have offered a sip to ends up polishing off the whole bottle.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
  • 2 cups vodka (80 proof)
  • 3 large apples, seeded and finely chopped
  • 4 ounces walnut pieces, toasted and ground
  • 2 cinnamon sticks, cracked
  • 1
    1

    2
    cups
    Tangy-Creamy Simple Syrup
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the vodka, apples, walnuts, and cinnamon in a half-gallon jar. Seal the jar and store in a cool, dark cabinet until fragrant, about 5 days.
  2. 2.
    Strain the mixture with a fine-mesh strainer into a clean quart jar.
  3. 3.
    Stir in the simple syrup.
  4. 4.
    Seal and store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, 1 to 2 days. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Sláinte!
Makes a belly-busting creamy Appletini.

Praline Peach

Peaches and almond praline are intimately united in my taste buds of memory. It could be because I associate both of them with a summer spent in an organic garden in Louisville, Kentucky, or because they are a natural flavor pairing (the kernel of a peach pit is a form of bitter almond). I have made this liqueur with both white sugar and brown sugar syrups. The color is purer with white (a glorious pastel peachy orange), but the praline flavor is way better with brown. Since my passion for eating and drinking has always been centered more in my mouth than my eyes, I use the brown syrup every time.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
  • 2 cups vodka (80 proof)
  • 3 yellow peaches, pitted and finely chopped
  • 1 vanilla bean (Madagascar or Bourbon), split
  • 1
    1

    2
    cups
    Brown Cow Simple Syrup
  • 1 teaspoon pure almond extract
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the vodka, peaches, and vanilla in a half-gallon jar. Seal the jar and store in a cool, dark cabinet until fragrant, about 5 days.
  2. 2.
    Strain the mixture with a fine-mesh strainer into a clean quart jar.
  3. 3.
    Stir in the simple syrup and extract.
  4. 4.
    Seal and store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, 1 to 2 days. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Skål!
Sip warm, spiked with a thimble of bourbon or brandy.

Caramel Crème
Copycat Dulce de Leche

M-m-m-milk jam! Dulce de leche, the Spanish cooked sweet-milk preserve, is commonly spread on bread for breakfast or snacks or turned into a dessert sauce. Recently it has become the base for a number of boutique liqueurs. Use this lovely liqueur in a Caramel Martini or in place of crème de cacao for a caramelized Brandy Alexander.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
  • 2
    1

    4
    cups dark rum (80 proof)
  • 1

    2
    vanilla bean (Madagascar or Bourbon), split
  • 1 (14-ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
  • Pinch of fine sea salt
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the rum and vanilla in a half-gallon jar. Seal the jar and store in a cool, dark cabinet until fragrant, about 3 days.
  2. 2.
    To make the dulce de leche:
    Preheat the oven to 425˚F. Pour the condensed milk into a glass pie plate or shallow glass baking dish and stir in the salt. Cover it tightly with aluminum foil. Set the pie plate in a roasting pan and add hot water to the roasting pan until the water comes halfway up the sides of the pie plate. Make sure the edges of the foil are not hanging in the water.

    Bake until deeply browned, about 1 hour, adding more water if the level in the roasting pan gets low. Remove from the oven and let cool; whisk the dulce de leche until smooth. (You can make this ahead and store in the refrigerator for up to 1 month; warm gently in a warm water bath before using.)

  3. 3.
    Remove the vanilla bean from the rum. Add the dulce de leche.
  4. 4.
    Seal the jar, and shake to combine. Store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, about 1 day. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Banana Split

In 2004 the city of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, was certified as the official birthplace of the banana split, 100 years after its creation. First made by soda jerk David Strickler at the Tassel Pharmacy, the banana split, bursting with a variety of flavors, was a staple of soda fountains for most of the twentieth century, vying with the simpler and arguably more elegant hot fudge sundae for a spot as the most iconic ice cream treat of all time. This liqueur captures three of the split’s essential components — bananas, chocolate syrup, and vanilla ice cream — in a creamy confection.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
  • 2 cups light rum (80 proof)
  • 3 bananas, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 cup (4 ounces) cacao nibs
  • 1 vanilla bean (Madagascar or Bourbon), split
  • 1
    1

    2
    cups
    Creamy Simple Syrup
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the rum, bananas, cacao nibs, and vanilla in a half-gallon jar. Seal the jar and store in a cool, dark cabinet until fragrant, about 5 days.
  2. 2.
    Strain the mixture with a fine-mesh strainer into a clean quart jar.
  3. 3.
    Stir in the simple syrup.
  4. 4.
    Seal and store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, 1 to 2 days. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Bottoms Up!
Blend with ice for an instant Banana Daiquiri.

Lemon Mousse

Lemon and cream generally don’t play nicely together — the one being highly acidic and the other prone to curdling. Most recipes keep the two quarantined, but here, using lemon zest instead of lemon juice eliminates the acids. All that’s left is a ton of fragrant lemon-scented oil that marries beautifully with a simple syrup to create a deliciously curious couple. Lemon Mousse is a lovely pastel yellow, but its brilliant lemon flavor is anything but muted.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the vodka and lemon zest in a half-gallon jar. Seal the jar and store in a cool, dark cabinet until fragrant, about 5 days.
  2. 2.
    Strain out the mixture with a fine-mesh strainer into a clean quart jar.
  3. 3.
    Stir in the simple syrup.
  4. 4.
    Seal and store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, 1 to 2 days. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Prost!
Spoon over berries or sip in a Lemon Cooler (1 part Lemon Mousse and 2 parts lemon-lime soda).

Chocolate Milk
Copycat Vermeer Dutch Chocolate Cream

My cooking career commenced with chocolate milk. I made it every day after school, and my technique, though self-taught, was flawless. Chocolate syrup (I was a devotee of Bosco) was drizzled in the glass first, followed by just enough milk to match its volume, tablespoon for tablespoon. The syrup had to be completely dissolved in the first round. Add too much milk too soon and inerasable chocolate skids irreparably marred the glass. If I did my job well, the rest was a breeze — just thin the chocolate base with more milk and drink up.

This recipe is nearly as straightforward. The biggest difference is that you have to make your own chocolate syrup; commercial brands are too sweet for this adults-only chocolate milk.

Makes about 1 quart

Ingredients
  • 3

    4
    cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2

    3
    cup sugar
  • Pinch of fine sea salt
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 cups vodka (80 proof)
  • 1 cup
    Creamy Simple Syrup
Instructions
  1. 1.
    Combine the cocoa powder, sugar, and salt in a saucepan. Slowly whisk in the water until smooth. Turn the heat to low and bring to a simmer, stirring often. Simmer for 2 minutes, stirring frequently. Let cool.
  2. 2.
    Combine the vodka, chocolate syrup, and simple syrup in a half-gallon jar.
  3. 3.
    Seal the jar and store in the refrigerator until the flavors taste blended, 1 to 2 days. Keep refrigerated and use within 1 month.

Note:
After 2 weeks in the refrigerator, the cream from the simple syrup may rise to the top of the liqueur. If this happens, shake the mixture to redistribute the cream.

Sláinte!
Gulp a glass well-chilled, with a cookie chaser.

Caramel, Syrup & Butterscotch Liqueurs

All sugar is sweet, but no sugar is just sweet; they vary considerably by their degree of processing. Raw sugars are minimally processed, and white sugars and brown sugars are fully processed. (See
page 20
for more about sugars.) Almost all of the previous recipes in these pages are made with fully processed sugars.

In this chapter, we are working with unrefined and caramelized sugars. They all have subtle aromatics, varying consistencies, and shifting hues — enough nuance to make them interesting flavoring agents in their own right.

One of the first things to happen in any sugar-refining process is that the stock (usually sugarcane or beets) is milled to extract its juices. The juices are boiled until the solid sweet particles concentrate to about 60 percent by weight. Another 10 percent of water is taken out by centrifuging, resulting in a dark brown paste that is supersaturated with sugar crystals. At this point the sugar can be sold as Japanese black sugar or soft jaggery.

The supersaturated sugar syrup is then seeded with sugar crystals, causing a chain reaction that precipitates a mass of coarse-grained, golden-hued sugar crystals coated with molasses. At this stage, the sugar can be left as damp crystals (called muscovado or Barbados sugar) or dried and formed into cakes (solid jaggery). Further refining of the damp sugar crystals by centrifuge draws off the molasses coating, leaving behind relatively dry golden-hued sugar crystals that are sold as demerara or turbinado sugar. When all of the molasses has been cast off, the resulting granulated sugar is pure white.

Completely processed sugar can be flavored after processing. Brown sugar is white sugar that is mixed with molasses. The more molasses, the darker the brown sugar.

Caramel is white sugar that has been heated. When sugar is heated enough to melt, it doesn’t just change color — it also changes structure. From the colorless and odorless sweet crystals emerge hundreds of new compounds, some sour, some bitter, and some aromatic. The hotter the sugar gets, the less like granulated sugar it becomes, eventually turning dark, molten, and bitter. Butterscotch is caramel with milk solids added to make a creamy confection.

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