Showing posts with label drinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drinks. Show all posts

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Homemade Apple Cider Vinegar: Because You Can


Being from New England, I always looked forward to apple picking season. It meant the smell of hay and fallen apples rotting in the cool, crisp air, warm apple cider with clove studded oranges, and cider donuts at haunted hay rides.

Hard apple cider was the first alcoholic beverage I enjoyed, and still enjoy. As my tastes have changed I’ve discovered new ways of enjoying the flavors of apples. In the past I wouldn’t have had apple cider vinegar in the pantry but now I’m fermenting my own and have a preferred brand at the Hollywood Farmer’s Market. The cider I’m fermenting? Made from apples I crushed in Yucaipa, CA last Los Angeles fall (picking apples on a 78 degree day).

A Google search of apple cider vinegar brings up a wide range of bold claims about the liquid’s cure-all powers. From lowering your blood pressure, soothing dandruff, and as a kick start to weight loss, vinegar is seemingly the answer for a variety of ailments. It may be a placebo effect but I feel better after drinking apple cider vinegar every morning, which I’ve done for over a year. My increased consumption of it, along with my interest in home brewing and fermentation, is what prompted me to make my own.

As the Desperate Bicycles once wisely said, “It was easy, it was cheap. Go and do it.” Making apple cider vinegar at home is easy and, if you don’t mind the fruit flies, a satisfying intro to fermentation. To get started, you will need a mother.

A mother is the base of vinegar. If you have made sourdough at home before, using a starter, you’re familiar with the concept of a mother. A mother is a bacteria culture that gives vinegar, sourdough, and fermented beverages like kombucha their sour taste by converting ethanol into acetic acid. If you are lucky and live where you can buy a mother from a farmer’s market or natural food store, great! If not, you can grow your own. You need a bottle of raw, unfiltered apple cider such as Braggs (make sure it already contains a small mother), and a bottle of alcoholic cider. Gently mix the Braggs to distribute the mother and combine the cider and vinegar in your glass jar. Cover with a clean kitchen towel for about two weeks and bam! a mother. You could search Craigslist as there is always something trying to give away or sell a vinegar mother. At least in Los Angeles. Definitely near San Francisco.

The process takes about a total of four weeks from start to finish. Watching the process is slow but magical. The cider goes from clear golden to a dark oxidized murky brown before becoming golden and beautiful once again. The whole time a pale, bubbly, skin-like mother forms on top, looking like something straight out of a cheesy 80s horror movie. It is amazing.

Homemade Apple Cider Vinegar Recipe
This recipe starts off as a gallon and reduces due to evaporation.

Supplies
A large, wide mouth glass jar (I used this one.)
Alcoholic apple cider
Kitchen/tea towel
String or a rubber band
Vinegar mother

Procedure
Clean the vessel well with soap and water.
Add alcoholic cider vigorously to aerate.
Add mother.
Cover with kitchen towel and secure around the neck with twine or rubber band.
Put in a cool, dry place. Stir gently every day for the first week so mold doesn't form on top.



That’s all you have to do. Taste after three weeks see how it’s progressing. Once you are satisfied with your vinegar transfer to bottles, label with the date, and enjoy. After aging for four weeks the first batch had sharp apple acidity, fresh fruit aromas, and was only slightly funky. You can cook with it, drink in water, or make a shrub. Homemade vinegar shouldn’t be used for preserving unless you measure the acidity using specialized tools.  

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Drinks to Make: November

Photo by James Ransom via Food52.

As it often does in Los Angeles, November snuck up on us. A trip to San Francisco last weekend kick-started our longing for cold weather but LA has been reluctant to comply.

Despite the sun, here are a few of the wintery drinks we're looking forward to this month: 

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Pairing Saag Paneer & Pumpkin Beers


It was a one-off, a fridge-clearing-out kind of pairing. Pairing saag paneer with Southern Tier's Pumking was a complete accident. 

We had this meal last October but by the time we realized that this combination worked pumpkin beers had disappeared from the shelves. You can't get even get Southern Tier in Los Angeles! Our bottle was a gift. 

This year we planned ahead and choose three pumpkin beers, Alaskan Pumpkin Porter, Shipyard Pumpkinhead Ale, and Dogfish Head Punkin Ale, made a batch of saag paneer, and tried to recreate the magic.  

Pumpkin and ginger are a classic pairing, showing up in savory soups as well as desserts. The fresh ginger in the saag and pumpkin notes in the beers play off each other, balancing the rich diary elements of buttermilk and cheese with acidity. Spices, including red pepper flakes, turmeric, and cumin, are brought out by the sweet, earthy beers. This is definitely a meal we recommend trying. And fast, before the pumpkin beers are gone from shelves for another year.

Alaskan Pumpkin Porter (Mike's favorite)
Nose: Earthy. 
Palate: Balanced pumpkin, cocoa, and Christmas spices with a complex, sweet finish. 

Shipyard Pumkinhead Ale
Nose: Yankee Candle.
Palate: Cider-like; light bodied and overly spiced. 

Dogfish Head Punkin Ale (Abby's favorite)
Nose: Pumpkin bread, heavy on the spice. 
Palate: Belgian and brown sugar; lots of pleasant, balanced sweetness.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

The Diki-Diki


































 




The Diki-Diki is a simple drink, which is why we made it tonight’s accompaniment to Pizza Night. Pizza Night is the night where we are too tired or hot to cook so we make other people do it for us. Pizza Night can occur multiple times a week. 

The Diki-Diki consists of only three ingredients, including two complex liqueurs: Swedish punsch and Calvados. Swedish punsch is a reddish-brown liqueur from Sweden that was recently made available in the U.S. under the brand name Kronan. It is sugar cane based and tastes earthy, smoky, and toasted. Calvados is an oak-aged apple brandy from Normandy. Young Calvados tastes like fresh apple cider but takes on notes of leather and becomes tannic as it ages. Similar to true Champagne and cognac, which both have to be from certain regions to carry that name, true Calvados must be from the Normandy region of France. Domestically produced versions are called applejack or simply apple brandy.

In this cocktail the rich earthiness of the punsch pairs well with the fruity earthiness of the Calvados with the acid and freshness of the grapefruit juice acting to tone down all that dirt.

Admittedly this wasn’t a great pairing for pizza as the fatty cheese ruined the depth of the Calvados and punsch. The Diki-Diki is better as a stand-alone cocktail that we recommend trying because of its ease and delicious, fresh taste.

The Diki-Diki
This recipe makes two cocktails.

3 oz. Calvados

1 oz. Swedish punsch

1 1/2 oz. fresh grapefruit juice

Measure the ingredients into a shaker, fill shaker with ice, and shake. Shake well.

Strain into cocktail glass.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Lillet Rosé!

lillet

























A bottle of Lillet Rosé never lasts more than a few days in our house. Surprisingly versatile, Lillet Rosé can be sipped by itself or added to a cocktail. The rosé Lillet is sweeter and less dry than the blanc and has notes of stone fruit and herbs. 

Rosé Reverse Martini

Pictured at right. This recipe comes from the booklet attached to bottle of Lillet. It is strong and delicious! The following recipe is for one cocktail; double the measurements to make two drinks.

4 oz. Lillet Rosé

1 oz. Hendrick's gin*
2 dashes orange bitters

Combine ingredients in a cocktail glass, add ice.
Stir well!

Strain into a cocktail glass
Garnish with an orange peel


Corpse Reviver #2

Pictured at left. This is a classic that we really shook up by simply replacing the standard Lillet Blanc with Lillet Rosé.This recipe makes two cocktails.

2 oz. gin
2 oz. Prunier (an orange liqueur similar to Grand Marnier)
2 oz. Lillet Rosé
2 oz. fresh lemon juice

2 dashes of absinthe

Combine ingredients in a cocktail shaker, add ice. 
Shake well!
Strain into a glass.


*We used Hendrick's because we had it on hand but you can use any gin.