The Drunken Botanist: The Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks (64 page)

BOOK: The Drunken Botanist: The Plants that Create the World's Great Drinks
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BRINE YOUR OWN OLIVES

A terrible olive can ruin a great martini. If you have access to fresh olives, try brining your own with nothing but water and salt.

Get fresh-picked green olives from a farmers' market (or a friend with an olive tree) and make a single cut in each one from top to bottom. Wash them in plain water and place them in a clean glass jar or bowl. Choose your container carefully; you'll need to weigh the olives down, so pick something with a wide mouth and find a plate or lid that just fits inside. (A sturdy plastic bag filled with water also works as a weight.) Soak the olives in water for 24 hours, being sure to keep them submerged. Keep them stored in a cool, dry place during this process.

Change the water every day for 6 days. After 6 days, make the final brine by combining 1 part pickling salt to 10 parts water in a saucepan. Bring to a boil and allow to cool. Pour the olives into jars and fill with brine. Add lemon, garlic, spices, or herbs, if desired. Seal them tightly and refrigerate for 4 more days. They'll be ready to eat and should be kept refrigerated and enjoyed fresh.

POMEGRANATE

Punica granatum

lythraceae (loosestrife family)

A
n 1867 medical journal entry on pomegranate explained that “the tincture, a liqueur glass morning and evening, infallibly expels the yellow tapeworm.” This was not the first report of the vermifugal powers of pomegranate: a Portuguese doctor had been making a tea of the bark for the same purpose since 1820 and calling it grenadine. Fortunately, by the second half of the nineteenth century, grenadine had come to refer to a sweet, ruby-colored fruit syrup used to flavor sodas and drinks, not a bark tea designed to kill intestinal worms.

A pomegranate tree is actually a large shrub of Asian and Middle Eastern origin. It still grows wild there today, but now it is cultivated throughout Europe, the Americas, and in tropical areas around the world. Although the tree has ancient origins and was extensively grown by Egyptians, there are just two species. The plants were once classified in a taxonomic family by themselves, until new molecular research uncovered their close genetic relationship to purple loosestrife, crepe myrtle, cuphea, and other seemingly dissimilar plants. (Crumpled flower petals are their most obvious shared anatomical feature.)

Pomegranate trees are now grown primarily in the Middle East, India, and China, although they are a specialty crop in the Mediterranean, and in Mexico and California. The fruit earned its species name
granatum
from the Latin word for “seeded,” and its fruit does, in fact, contain a few hundred seeds surrounded by bright red pulp. The syrup made from it, grenadine, derives from the early French word for pomegranate,
grenade.
The hand-thrown projectile of the same name was invented in the sixteenth century and was named after the fruit, perhaps because they were each the same size and filled with explosive materials of a very different kind.

Grenadine syrup was popular in French cafes as a sweetener for water in the 1880s, and shortly thereafter it began turning up in American soda fountains and cocktail bars. In 1910, the St. Regis hotel in New York served a cocktail called the Polly made of gin, grenadine, lemon juice, and soda. In 1913, the
New York Times
sent a skeptical male reporter to a bar designed just for women called Café des Beaux Arts on Sixth Avenue at Fortieth Street. Among the many marvels he discovered in this feminine establishment were brightly colored cocktails, including the frothy pink Beaux Arts Fizz, made with gin, orgeat (sweet almond) syrup, grenadine, and lemon juice.

Grenadine's run as a pure pomegranate syrup was surprisingly short. Artificial versions appeared in the early twentieth century, and by 1918 manufacturers were challenging new labeling laws,
trying to pass off any sort of red syrup as grenadine. As one reporter described the situation, “The syrup and the fruit from which it took its name were total strangers.” Although the artificial form eventually won out, grenadine stayed behind the bar, becoming an essential ingredient in hundreds of cocktails, including the Jack Rose and the tiki classic, Tequila Sunrise.

Thanks to a renewed interest in authentic ingredients, grenadine made with actual pomegranates can now be found on the shelves of better liquor stores and specialty food shops, as can pomegranate liqueurs and infused vodkas. But there is no substitute for homemade grenadine made from fresh-squeezed pomegranates. Even replacing the fresh juice with bottled compromises the flavor. When the fruit is in season, it is well worth spending an hour or so in the kitchen making up a batch for the freezer.

HOMEMADE GRENADINE

5 to 6 fresh pomegranates

1 to 2 cups sugar

1 ounce vodka

To peel the pomegranates, score the rind with a knife as if you're cutting an orange into wedges. Carefully peel away the rind, leaving the seeds and membrane intact. Squeeze with a fruit press or manual juicer and filter through a sieve. You should have about 2 cups of juice.

Measure 1 cup of the sugar into a saucepan, add the juice, stir, and bring to a simmer. Let the sugar cool and taste it; add more sugar if you prefer a sweeter syrup. Stir in the vodka as a preservative. Pour into a clean jar and store it in the refrigerator, where it will last about a month, or in the freezer. Adding another ounce or two of vodka will help keep it from freezing.

JACK ROSE

1½ ounces applejack

½ ounce fresh lemon juice

½ ounce grenadine

Shake all the ingredients over ice and strain into a cocktail glass.

-- proceeding onward to --

berries & vines

Just about everything that can be said of fruit trees applies to berries and vines as well, with one exception: these plants are reluctant to grow in containers and won't enjoy life indoors.

 

GROWING NOTES

 

Berries tend to be low-maintenance, requiring only a trellis, once-a-year pruning, and occasional fertilizer. Most berries are planted in bare-root form (you buy a clump of live roots attached to a cane, not a growing plant) in winter or early spring.

Do check with local experts to find the varieties that grow best in your climate, and ask if you need a nearby pollinizer. Get pruning advice specific to the variety you've chosen: some raspberries, for instance, bear fruit twice a year and only on two year-old canes, which means that you have to cut back the old canes after they've fruited, but let the younger canes grow unmolested for two years before they bear fruit.

• • • GROWING NOTES • • •
berries & vines

Blackberry

Rubus
spp.

Do yourself a favor and choose a thornless variety. Extend the growing season by selecting several cultivars with different blooming periods; for instance, Arapaho starts in mid-June, and Black Diamond bears in August. Loganberry, marionberry, boysenberry, and tayberry crosses (generally blackberry-raspberry hybrids) are well worth growing.

Blueberry

Vaccinium
spp.

Because blueberries prefer acid, moist soil, growing them in a container might be the best way to give them the conditions they need. Top Hat and Chippewa are compact varieties for pots. Some varieties tolerate winter temperatures to –20 degrees Fahrenheit.

Currant

Ribes nigrum

The black currant, used to make cassis, is still banned in some states even though new disease-resistant cultivars do not spread the dreaded white pine blister rust. Ben Lomond is a vigorous Scottish variety. Red and white currants have a bright, light flavor and make beautiful garnishes in drinks. (See
p. 263
.)

Hops

Humulus lupulus

Hops require specific day lengths to bloom, so do best in latitudes of 35 to 55 degrees north and south. The golden hop vine Aureus, with its yellow to lime green foliage, is a widely sold ornamental, as is Bianca, a variety with light green foliage that matures to a darker green. (See
p. 210
.)

Raspberry

Rubus idaeus

Look for everbearing varieties that fruit over a long season. Pruning is simpler because all canes are cut down each winter. Try Caroline or Polka Red.

Sloe

Prunus spinosa

Also called blackthorn, this large, thorny shrub is hardy to –30F. Bears the fruit used to make sloe gin—if the birds don't get them first. (See
p. 281
.)

INFUSED VODKAS

Nothing could be simpler than infusing herbs, spices, and fruit in vodka to make your own flavored spirit for cocktails. There's just one catch: some plants, particularly tender green herbs like basil or cilantro, produce bitter, strange flavors if they've been soaking for long. To get around this, make a small batch as a test, and taste it frequently, starting just a few hours after the infusion has begun. For herbs, 8 to 12 hours may be sufficient. For fruit, 1 week may be long enough. Citrus rinds and spices can soak for a month. The trick is that as soon as it tastes wonderful, strain it. Time will not necessarily improve an infusion.

The instructions are simply this:

Fill a clean jar with herbs, spices, or fruit. Pour in an affordable but not rock-bottom vodka, like Smirnoff. Seal tightly and store in a cool, dark place. Sample regularly until you decide it's perfect. Strain it and use it within a few months.

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