The Drunken Botanist: The Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks (41 page)

BOOK: The Drunken Botanist: The Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks
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Chamomile flowers contain a rich mixture of aromatic and medicinal compounds that are strongest just after the flowers ripen and dry. In addition to their well-known sedative qualities, pharmacological studies show that the flowers' anti-inflammatory and antiseptic effects actually do help calm the stomach.

The makers of Hendrick's Gin claim chamomile as an ingredient, and a few distillers have made it the central ingredient in their liqueurs. J. Witty Spirits in California makes a chamomile liqueur, and the Italian distillery Marolo infuses chamomile in grappa for a sweet, soothing, and surprisingly floral digestif. It is also a key ingredient in vermouth, and one of the few that vermouth makers will admit to on tours of their facilities.

ELDERFLOWER

Sambucus nigra

caprifoliaceae (honeysuckle family)

T
he flowers of the elderberry bush impart a flavor that, until recently, was virtually unknown to American palates. Then, in 2007, a pale yellow liqueur called St-Germain entered the cocktail scene. Although it was marketed as an elegant French liqueur, the taste is probably more familiar to British drinkers, who have been imbibing elderflower wine and nonalcoholic elderflower cordial for years.

The elderberry bush flourishes throughout Europe and the United Kingdom. It is a classic hedgerow plant: it grows wild in the countryside, pushing up new shoots from a massive root base every year. The bush produces tiny purplish black berries that can be pressed into juice, cooked into jam, or made into a homemade fruit wine. Elderberry wine has a robust, fruity flavor that is not to everyone's liking, but unscrupulous wine merchants in the nineteenth century knew they could use it to extend wine and port and no one would know the difference.

But it is the flat-topped cluster of honey-scented flowers, not the berries, that contribute their remarkable perfume to elderflower liqueur. No other spirit tastes quite so much like a meadow in bloom; if one tries to imagine what honeybees taste when they dive between a flower's petals, this drink is surely it.

St-Germain's distiller reveals little of its recipe, and what is disclosed has been cloaked in fanciful prose. French farmers, the distiller claims, harvest the blossoms in spring and carry them by “specially rigged bicycles” from the foothills of the French Alps to “local depots.” They declare that the flowers are not macerated, but that a secret method allows them to persuade the flavor to reveal itself. The extract is then combined with grape eau-de-vie, sugar, and (although they are vague on this point) probably some citrus fruit. The result is a liqueur that tastes of flowers, honey, and the distant, spectral seduction of fruit—pear, perhaps, or melon.

IS
SAMBUCA
MADE FROM
SAMBUCUS
?

Sambuca
is an anise-flavored Italian liqueur that is lovely all by itself after dinner. (Ignore that nonsense about soaking coffee beans in
sambuca
and lighting it on fire. Just pour a little in a glass after dinner and sip it like an adult.) In addition to its overwhelmingly licorice flavor, it can also get a note of fruity complexity from elderberries. Some black
sambucas
derives their rich midnight purple color from the crushed skins of the elderberry, whereas others use artificial colors.

ELDERFLOWER CORDIAL

4 cups water

4 cups sugar

30 clusters fresh (not brown or decaying) elderflowers (
S. nigra
)

2 lemons, sliced

2 oranges, sliced

1¾ ounces citric acid (available at health food stores)

Bring the water and sugar to a boil and allow to cool. While it is cooling, go outside and cut fresh elderflowers, preferably on a warm afternoon when the fragrance is strongest, and shake gently to evict any bugs. Bring indoors immediately and use the tines of a fork to separate the flowers from their stems. Combine all ingredients in a large bowl or jug and let it sit for 24 hours, stirring and tasting as necessary. After 24 hours, strain the mixture into clean, sterile Mason jars. Store in the refrigerator for up to a month or longer in the freezer.

ELDERBERRIES

Although elderberries are used to make jam, wine, and cordial, they can be mildly toxic. All parts of the plant contain a cyanide-producing substance along with other toxins; even the berries should be harvested only when they are completely ripe. North American species of elderberry, including
Sambucus racemosa,
S. canadensis,
and others, may be more toxic than
S. nigra,
the species that flourishes in English hedgerows. Cooking the berries helps reduce these toxins.

Elderberries tolerate all but the coldest of climates, surviving winter temperatures as low as –30 degrees Fahrenheit. They are shallow-rooted and prefer a topdressing of compost and balanced fertilizer every spring, as well as regular water in summer. To keep a bush fruitful, cut back all canes or branches more than three years old in winter or early spring. Dead or diseased canes should be removed as well. York and Kent are two popular varieties, but find one that works best in your region.

 

full/part sun

regular water

hardy to -30f/-34c

An ornamental variety of
S. nigra,
sold as Black Lace, is popular around the world as a garden plant for its dramatic black foliage and pink flower clusters. It will bloom regardless of whether it has a mate, but to get fruit, there must be another elderberry nearby.

IMBIBING ELDERFLOWERS

Elderflower liqueurs like St-Germain or homemade cordials mix well with almost everything, adding floral and honey notes without ever seeming cloying. Here are a few ways to try it:

 

•Add a splash to Champagne; float a yellow viola on top.

•Mix a martini with ½ ounce each of elderflower liqueur/cordial and Chartreuse (the green variety if you're brave, the yellow if you're not) in place of the vermouth. Garnish with lemon peel.

•Use soda and elderflower liqueur as a substitute for tonic in a gin and tonic, and add a squeeze of lemon instead of lime.

HOPS

Humulus lupulus
and
H. japonicus

cannabaceae (cannabis family)

B
eer is not made from hops. It is made from barley, and sometimes other grains, then flavored with hops. But it is impossible to imagine beer without this strange, bitter vine.

Before the discovery, in about 800 AD, that hops could be added to beer to improve its flavor and preserve it, brewers mixed all kinds of strange herbs and spices into their beer. The word
Gruit
is an old German term for the bouquet of herbal ingredients that once went into beer. Yarrow, wormwood, meadowsweet, and even intoxicating and deadly herbs like hemlock, nightshade and henbane all went into the fermentation tank, often with unfortunate results. But that changed once hops migrated from China to Europe in the Middle Ages.

One of the earliest hop farms was established in Bavaria in 736 AD. At that time, brewing and other such scientific and medicinal pursuits were in the hands of monks. Hop farms became common at monasteries throughout Europe and turned up in England by the sixteenth century. With their arrival, a new style of beer was born.

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