Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Toasty Party Drinks
Somehow imbibing in a cold party cocktail doesn't sound so hot , especially if you or your guests have slogged through sleet and snow. Bring some cheer and warmth into the picture by mixing up some hot ciders and punches.These Victorian drinks have lasted through many a Christmas season and you can bring them back.the best part, they're far from being Victorian.They have spice and sass along with a good kick.In other words they are the perfect holiday libation.
One of the best hot drinks is mulled cider.This is simply taking regular Apple cider and mixing it with all spice berries along with clove cinnamon and some nutmeg.For a more fresh from the tree flavor, add an apple studded with cloves.A cup of dark rum gives it the much needed kick.You can float orange slices on top for some color..If you want a pulpier cider, add some fresh apple juice straight from your juicer.Another variation is adding amontidillo sherry as well as honey , again preferably dark to temper the taste. Cider can include the hard alcoholic variety or applejack and it too, can be heated.It does have to have the soft cider as a base however you can add more of the hard stuff and less of the soft version for a boozier version.Spices are still required as well.If you're having a more intimate party of six or eight you can think about serving applejack toddies.It's boiling regular cider with with cloves and cinnamon.The applejack is then added and the mug is then garnished with cinnamon stick.
Hot punches are a nice way of warming up a crowd ,both figuratively and literally..One of the best is Charles Dickens, version.,Although everyone knows this great English author as the creator of that holiday classic "A Christmas Carol" he is also the originator of tasty punch, worthy of old Fezziwig himself.It is a heady blend of both rum and brandy along with brown sugar and lemon?It does come with a warning.The punch has to be lit with a match after it has simmer for a few minutes over a low flame.Also there is the added step of chilling it overnight and then rewarming it for your guests..There is also the Smoking Bishop punch mention in A Christmas Carol, and it had been around for at least one hundred years before Dickens even mentioned it in the story.Coleridge even called it a drink divine..This ruby port mixed with lemons and oranges along with a variety of spices.There is the usual. Clove and cinnamon but Ginger is added for zing as is mace.Red wine is used as temperer of sorts and also there is sugar thrown in.This is a more involved recipe because the fruit has to studded with cloves and then roasted.Two pots are needed to cook up both the red wine and spices.There is a 24 hour cooling time before it's reheated and served. An easier drink is the Jamaican tea punch.Basically it's brewed tea with Jamaican rum added. Fresh squeezed lemon or orange juice is added along with some sugar for flavoring.
Nothing beats a cup of mulled cider or hot punch. On a blustery snowy night.These bring heat to any party ,perfect fr thawing out frozen guests.They reflect tradition. But also the liveliness that comes with that.
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Labels:
Charles Dickens,
cider,
lemon,
oranges,
punch,
rum brandy,
tea
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