Read The Drunken Botanist: The Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks Online
Authors: Amy Stewart
Tags: #Non-Fiction
Citrus sinensis
The sweet orange, probably a cross between pomelo and mandarin, is one of the most widely grown fruit trees in the world, accounting for almost three-quarters of all citrus production. Valencia, Navel, and blood oranges are the best-known varieties. While they are popular for fresh fruit and juice, they are not the top choice for distillers making citrus-flavored liqueurs. Those liqueurs tend to be flavored with the more complex, bitter sour oranges. However, the peel is widely available through spice distributors, so it is often used to add a bright note to gins and herbal liqueurs.
One orange-flavored liqueur that employs sweet oranges is Orange-rie, which its distiller describes as a blend of hand-zested Navalino oranges (botanists do not recognize a variety called Navalino, but perhaps they mean Navelina, a sweet navel orange from Spain first described in 1910), cinnamon, and cloves, infused in Scotch whisky. Another is Solerno Blood Orange Liqueur, a sweet liqueur made from Sanguinello blood oranges that combines separate distillations of the fruit, the peel, and lemon rind. It's an upscale substitute for triple sec and adds a lively, sweet note to gin drinks.
BLOOD ORANGE SIDECAR
This variation on the classic sidecar replaces lemon juice with blood orange juice. Feel free to adjust the proportions to taste. And if you're not a fan of brandy, replace it with bourbon. (And if you're not a fan of bourbon, go read another book. No, seriously, experiment with your spirit of choice. Vodka, gin, rum? Give it a try!)
1½ ounces Cognac or brandy
¾ ounce blood orange juice
½ ounce Solerno Blood Orange Liqueur (or another citrus liqueur like triple sec)
Dash of Angostura bitters
Shake all the ingredients except the bitters over ice and strain into a cocktail glass. Add a dash of bitters on top.
Orange flower water
: Also called orange blossom water, this is a hydrosol (water-based) extraction of orange blossoms. It is a key ingredient in a Ramos Gin Fizz. Some hydrosols are a by-product of neroli oil manufacture; the water left after the distillation is saved and sold as orange flower oil. in other cases, the water or steam extraction of the blossoms is done specifically to create orange flower water without also distilling the oil. In either case, trace amounts of essential oil are present in the water, along with some water-soluble flavor and aroma compounds that are not found in the essential oil.Bartenders prefer French brands such as A. Monteux to middle eastern brands, but both are fine to experiment with.
Citrus à junos
(syn.
C. ichangensis à C. reticulata
var.
austere
)
This thick-skinned, sour cross between a mandarin and the strange, bitter Ichang Papeda comes from China and made its way to Japan around 600 AD. While the fruit is not particularly tasty, the rind exudes a complex, fruity citrus fragrance beloved by Japanese cooks.
Yuzu
zest can be found in a soy sauce called
ponzu,
and it also flavors miso soup. People bathe with it as well; a traditional Japanese solstice bath features
yuzu
fruit floating in hot water.
Yuzu
is an enchanting addition to flavored sake and
shochu
-based liqueur. A Korean
yuzu
syrup called
yucheong,
available at Asian grocery stores, is mixed with hot water to make tea but also happens to be a fantastic cocktail ingredient.
Because
yuzu
trees are hardy to 10 degrees Fahrenheit, they survive in mountainous regions where no other citrus can be found. Gardeners in England and colder regions of the United States who are determined to grow citrus outdoors might have luck with
yuzu
if other citrus have failed to thrive.
RAMOS GIN FIZZ
New Orleans bartender Henry Ramos is credited with inventing this drink around 1888. During the 1915 Mardi Gras Carnival season, he created quite a spectacle by having thirty-five muscular bartenders line up and shake the drinks. Many bars won't make it, fearing the liability of serving raw eggs, or dreading the effort involved. At Graphic, London's excellent gin bar, it is not unusual for a Ramos Gin Fizz to be passed around the room and shaken by bartenders, waitresses, and customers until the froth is perfect.
1½ ounces gin (the original recipe called for Old Tom gin)
½ ounce lemon juice
½ ounce lime juice
½ ounce simple syrup
1 ounce cream
1 egg white
2 to 3 drops orange flower water
1 to 2 ounces soda water
Combine all the ingredients except the soda water in a cocktail shaker and shake without ice for at least 30 seconds. Then add ice and continue to shake for at least 2 minutes, passing the shaker around the room as needed to keep it going without incurring frostbite. Pour the soda water into a highball glass and strain the fizz into the glass.
Orgeat
(pronounced or-ZHA, although many americans pronounce it or-ZHAT): A sweet, often nonalcoholic syrup made with almonds, sugar, and orange flower water, sometimes in a base of barley water. Orgeat is an essential ingredient in a Mai Tai, although it is left out all too often.
MAI TAI
1½ ounces dark rum (some recipes mix dark and light rum)
½ ounce lime juice
½ ounce curaçao or another orange liqueur
Dash of simple syrup
Dash of orgeat syrup
Maraschino cherry
Wedge of pineapple
Shake all the liquid ingredients and strain. Serve over crushed ice in a goblet or highball glass. Garnish with the cherry and a pineapple wedge. If you have ever been tempted to put a paper umbrella in a glass, this would be the time.
-- and wrapping things up with --
nuts & seeds
Nut: a dry fruit that does not open at maturity to release its seed; generally surrounded by a hard woody outer covering and containing only one seed.
Seed: a structure containing an embryo which forms in a plant's ovary following fertilization.
Â
Almond
|
Coffee
|
Hazelnut
|
Kola Nut
|
Walnut
Â
Prunus dulcis
rosaceae (rose family)