Authors: Andrew Schloss
Tags: #liquor, #cofee, #home cocktails, #cocktails, #liqueurs, #popular liqueurs, #spirits, #creamy, #kahlua, #unsweetened infused, #flavored alcohol, #bar recipes, #sweetners, #distilled, #herbal, #nutty, #creative coctails, #flowery, #infused spirits, #clones, #flavorings, #margarita, #home bar, #recipes, #cointreau, #cocktail recipes, #alcohol, #caramel, #homemade liqueurs, #fruity, #flavoring alcohol
You could blend together a cabinetful of spices to flavor this exotic liqueur, or you could just crack open a box of chai tea bags, break apart a few cinnamon sticks, and call it a day. Chai tea, the easy-to-love spiced black tea, is an effortless way to obtain huge flavor impact with minimum effort. Because alcohol is super-adept at hooking up with flavor compounds, steeping the tea bags in hot water to release their flavor is unnecessary. Just mix everything together and let it do its thing. But take a few deep breaths before you close the jar — this one smells as good as it tastes.
Makes about 1 quart
Salut!
Use it to spike warm cider or make a Spiced Red Wine (
page 253
).
White tea possesses a fragile floral fragrance that is enhanced here by the essence of pale Turkish figs. It is a delicate combination that would be lost as a tea but is fine-tuned when captured in alcohol. I use dry gin, which is less aromatic than Dutch gin, to eliminate extraneous flavor elements.
Makes about 1 quart
Skål!
A beautiful liqueur for perfuming a gin Martini or an icy glass of lemonade.
Lapsang Souchong tea leaves are fermented into black tea and then dried over smoky pine fires, lending this highly aromatic tea a resinous flavor. In this fire-engine red liqueur, that smoky base is underscored with additions of pimentón (Spanish smoked paprika) and a spike of smoked black pepper. The overall effect is a knockout; use it to smoke up a Manhattan.
Makes about 1 quart
L’chaim!
Liven things up with a Smokin’ Mary (
page 242
) or a Volcano (
page 248
).
Tannins are components in some plants that bind to and precipitate proteins and alkaloids, acting as a deterrent to predators and as an insecticide. When you drink tea, red wine, or some fruit juices (grape or apple in particular), tannins in those products create a drying, puckering sensation in the mouth. In excess, this reaction can be unpleasant, but when controlled, the drying effect is translated by our brains as thirst, making the liquid in the tea, juice, or wine feel more refreshing.
The tannins in Tannin Teaser come from black tea leaves and persimmons. Unripe persimmon, particularly the Hachiya variety (which is heart-shaped), is especially high in tannins.
Makes about 1 quart
Santé!
Makes for a sultry Gin and Tonic or Screwdriver.
Maghreb-style mint tea (green tea with mint leaves) is a drink of hospitality throughout North Africa, served whenever there are guests. It is always sweetened. Like matcha in Japan, the serving of Maghreb tea is highly ritualized in Morocco, with the head of the house pouring tea from a long spouted pot held at an impressive height above the guest’s glass. The cascade of tea hitting its mark with nary a drop spilled is equivalent to a perfectly executed high dive. The virtuosity and refreshing comfort of Moroccan mint tea is captured beautifully in this delicate liqueur.
Makes about 1 quart
Bottoms Up!
Splash over ice and add a wedge of lime when heat and humidity overwhelm.
It was a dark and sultry night, heady with the scent of espresso, cocoa, and barely burnt sugar — a night to be savored sip by bittersweet sip. This slightly opaque, naturally thick liqueur is loaded with microscopic flavor-bursting particles. If you prefer a transparent liqueur, you can strain the tincture through several layers of damp cheesecloth set in the strainer, but I advise against it. The flavor is so much fuller if you don’t, and the only downside is having to shake the bottle each time you pour yourself yet another decadent drink.
Makes about 1 quart
Prost!
Makes a delicious Mocha Manhattan with a few drops of chocolate bitters.
As unadorned and sublime as a Hershey bar, this transparent, barely tinted liqueur is the disembodied spirit of roasted cocoa. The alcohol absorbs all of the nuanced chocolate flavor from cacao nibs (cracked roasted cocoa beans). Amended with the fragrance of real vanilla and sugared to bittersweetness, this is an all-purpose chocolate liqueur, great in Chocolate Martinis.
Makes about 1 quart
Salut!
Lots of options: Banshee (
page 239
), Brandy Al (
page 239
), Chocolate Xander (
page 240
), or Mocha Nut, pictured here (
page 240
).
The snobbery surrounding premium, gourmet chocolate made with high percentages of cocoa bean (70, 80, even 100 percent) has led to the brainless perception that everything in a chocolate bar’s ingredient list other than the beans (sugar, cream, vanilla, or butter) is an unwelcome adulterant. There is a certain fascist logic to striving for 100-percent purity, but by avoiding the beautiful offspring born from disparate elements, you never learn that a little sugar boldly brings the fruitiness forward, and that a touch of dairy relaxes the brittle snap of dark chocolate, softening its militaristic salute into an affable handshake. This liqueur is friendly; you’ll want to take it out for a drink.
Makes about 1 quart
Skål!
Pour over a scoop of vanilla and a scoop of coffee ice cream for a just dessert.