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| Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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This is the best fruit liqueur ever. Best with fresh wild raspberries but
cultivated berries will work as well 1 750 ml bottle Canadian Rye whisky (American Bourbon would be second choice) 2 cups very ripe wild raspberries 1 cup dark wildflower honey. (the darker the better) Mash berries and soak in whisky for about 2 weeks. Strain and add cup of honey. Shake to dissolve honey. Age minimum of 1 hour before drinking. Really good with a silky sweet raspberry taste. Serve in a cocktail glass with a single ice cube. Farmer John |
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Fudge wrote:
This is the best fruit liqueur ever. Best with fresh wild raspberries but cultivated berries will work as well 1 750 ml bottle Canadian Rye whisky (American Bourbon would be second choice) 2 cups very ripe wild raspberries 1 cup dark wildflower honey. (the darker the better) Mash berries and soak in whisky for about 2 weeks. Strain and add cup of honey. Shake to dissolve honey. Age minimum of 1 hour before drinking. Really good with a silky sweet raspberry taste. Serve in a cocktail glass with a single ice cube. Farmer John Sounds delightful, but why the "brown" whiskeys instead of vodka? Just asking because some Scandinavian friends use vodka to steep a variety of fruits and berries (individually, of course) and they are quite nice. gloria p |
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Just about any neutral or non objectionably flavoured spirit could be used.
I like the taste of Canadian Rye whisky but vodka would do just as well. I have used Crown Royal but couldn't tell because the fruit and honey masks the taste of premium whisky. The same recipe could be used with fresh ripe strawberries substituted for raspberries. An excellent Drambuie substitute can be made with scotch and rosemary. Ersatz Drambuie 1 bottle cheap scotch whiskey Sprigs of rosemary 1 cup wildflower honey Bruise rosemary and soak in scotch for 2 days. Remove rosemary. Add honey and shake to dissolve. Age 1 minute before tasting. Serve over ice. Purists will **** on this but the price is right and after a few shots, who cares!!!! Farmer John "Fudge" wrote in message . .. This is the best fruit liqueur ever. Best with fresh wild raspberries but cultivated berries will work as well 1 750 ml bottle Canadian Rye whisky (American Bourbon would be second choice) 2 cups very ripe wild raspberries 1 cup dark wildflower honey. (the darker the better) Mash berries and soak in whisky for about 2 weeks. Strain and add cup of honey. Shake to dissolve honey. Age minimum of 1 hour before drinking. Really good with a silky sweet raspberry taste. Serve in a cocktail glass with a single ice cube. Farmer John |
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Best fruit... drink... ever I got from this newsgroup, years and years
ago. My black rasberries (domestic) were yeilding a handful here and there, because they take a long time to get established and make jammin' and jellin' quantities. Someone suggested putting a handful or a few at a time into a jar of brandy. I did that for about four years. By the fourth year the brambles were yielding enough that I still have a few small treasured jars of black rasberry jelly, but I threw a few in the "berry brandy jar" anyway. From time to time, at least once a year in the winter when I wasn't adding any fruit, I squished and strained out the "old" berries. It tasted pretty good, very berry-y. Then we moved (sob! wail! No bramble berries on the new place!!). The jar of "berry brandy" came out of the old fridge, into the back of the fridge at the new house, and was promptly forgotten. It's been about four years since the move. I recently found the bottle, sparkling clear from its final pre-move straining. OH. MY. GOODNESS!!!! A mouthful of pure July! I almost felt a hot summer breeze go by, and I'm sure I heard cicadas. Nectar of the Gods, I kid thee not. :-D SO... whatever your fresh berry liqueur recipe... save some aside. Put it in the fridge. Forget it for several years. I *know* mine didn't taste this good in 2000. ----------------------------------------- Only know that there is no spork. |
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Best fruit... drink... ever I got from this newsgroup, years and years
ago. My black rasberries (domestic) were yeilding a handful here and there, because they take a long time to get established and make jammin' and jellin' quantities. Someone suggested putting a handful or a few at a time into a jar of brandy. I did that for about four years. By the fourth year the brambles were yielding enough that I still have a few small treasured jars of black rasberry jelly, but I threw a few in the "berry brandy jar" anyway. From time to time, at least once a year in the winter when I wasn't adding any fruit, I squished and strained out the "old" berries. It tasted pretty good, very berry-y. Then we moved (sob! wail! No bramble berries on the new place!!). The jar of "berry brandy" came out of the old fridge, into the back of the fridge at the new house, and was promptly forgotten. It's been about four years since the move. I recently found the bottle, sparkling clear from its final pre-move straining. OH. MY. GOODNESS!!!! A mouthful of pure July! I almost felt a hot summer breeze go by, and I'm sure I heard cicadas. Nectar of the Gods, I kid thee not. :-D SO... whatever your fresh berry liqueur recipe... save some aside. Put it in the fridge. Forget it for several years. I *know* mine didn't taste this good in 2000. ----------------------------------------- Only know that there is no spork. |
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