Boston Apothecary

August 1, 2010

this day in history… 1879

Filed under: liqueur recipes, traditions — Tags: , , — sjs @ 2:46 pm

i’ve been collecting books from the university of california’s wine and liquor research bibliographies for a long time now.  i’ve finally turned up a few oldies that reveal tiny glimpse of what was being imbibed in the hayday of the cocktail era.

the sources mainly focus on wine and distilled spirits which were studied to death to provide really detailed finger prints of what people were drinking well into the 19th century.

liqueurs (think cointreau, chartreuse, etc.) were not studied in so much detail.  they were economically very significant because they are taxed so high, but most all researchers just throw up their hands in confusion when analyzing them because of the variety.  all of the metrics they put liqueurs through showed massive variance that barely seems useful unless you are just curious about one proprietary product. (and luckily i am!)

herstein and gregory’s “the technology and chemistry of wines and liqueurs” (1935) is brilliant when it comes to wines and spirits analyses but becomes kind of silly in their liqueurs chapter.  according to herstein and gregory liqueurs come in grades like average (sub divided into single strength and double strength), good, very good, excellant.  the biggest difference between average and excellent is an increase in alcohol as well as sugar.  of course there is no empirical data to back up their categorization, but they do also provide recipes for the same liqueur of different grades to show how proportions of ingredients changed.

the text has tons of recipes but is written in the “shovelware” style.  many look like they were plagiarized and never tried.  some don’t seem to work because they are missing information like how big the recipe is supposed to be.  the recipes are prefaced with the warning that they are only examples, but it is still half assed for an otherwise incredibly thorough text.

when you go back this far in time (1935) the bibliographies are dominated by foreign languages.  many of the charts are borrowed from these foreign language sources and are hard to track down.  herstein and gregory borrow a chart from leach (leach, a. e. “food inspection and analysis. new york 1920″ who borrowed it from the famous german chemist konig.  joseph konig’s (i’m missing an umlaut on the “o” of his last name) book “chemie der menschlichen nahrungs- und genussmittel” (i’m not sure if i cited the title correctly) has many editions which goes back to the end of the 19th century.

konig has a chart that analyzes many famous liqueurs for many metrics.  the only numbers of value to us are specific gravity, alcohol content and sugar content.  (if you know what ash content means let me know)

here goes…  (1879 edition)

benedictiner-bitter   specific gravity 1.0709, alcohol 52%, sugar (g/l) 325.7

creme de menthe                                       1.0447,                  48%,                        276.3

annisette de bordeaux                            1.0847,                    42%                        344.4

curacao                                                          1.0300                    55%                         285.0

the 1918 edition doesn’t seem to have a chart but rather summarizes the results in a paragraph. (it took me a while to figure that out because i don’t speak german.  i just found all of the search terms in a paragraph with most of the figures. i think the paragraph also references another text where the data may be borrowed from.)

another edition adds….  (1920)

ginger                                                            1.0481                       47.5%                     259.2

kummel                                                         1.0830                     33.9%                     311.8

pfefferminz-likor (pepper mint)         1.1429                      34.5%                     473.1

chartreuse (green?)                                 1.0799                     43.18%                   343.5

punsch (schwedischer)                          1.1030                     26.3%                      332.0

maraschino                                                 1.1042                     31.76%                    346.8

this famous chart also comes up other texts like “the chemical engineer, volume xxi. 1915″ (a journal)

the significance of this all is that we see a very early sugar and alcohol ethic of the products.  the majority of the emotional content of a drink comes from these relationships plus acidity (we make the assumption that lemons haven’t changed much in acid over 120 years)

since then alcohol contents have gone down. sugar contents have stayed the same for some products and gone down slightly in others.  cointreau is slightly less sweet than 280g/l and i’m pretty sure the chartreuses are down into the 200’s as well which would be the biggest migration.  which chartreuse was not explicitly specified, but if probability favors green the alcohol has also increased significantly.

the last commercially bottled swedish punsch i came across (”carlshamns flag punsch”) had 1.082 specific gravity, 26% alcohol and 267g/l sugar.  switching bottlings would definitely change the emotional content of a drink with swedish punsch…

September 18, 2009

ice wine grenadine

Filed under: liqueur recipes, non-alcoholic, traditions — Tags: , , — sjs @ 4:14 pm

so for a while i’ve been fascinated by the idea of concentrating liquids in the absence of heat.  heat tends to destroy certain delicate flavors.   it was explained to me that you can’t make strawberry eau-de-vie you can only make “cooked strawberry” eau-de-vie.  the same is true of the pomegranate and is why i was thwarted in making my pomegranate triple-sec.  (the fruit expression sucked).  ideas sat in my head for a while and i was further dazzled by a honey called malati di bosco made, not from blossoms, but alpine spruce trees that get attacked by aphids.  the bees collect the excess aphid secretions and you experience the concentrated soul of the tree without heat interfering. (maple syrup is created by reducing maple sap significantly.  heats evaporates lots of flavor but also creates new ones)  the honey is epic with the ironous blood and spruce pineyness making you feel the trees’ sorrow.

all this time i’ve been waiting for pomegranate season to see if i could really find their soul.  all the pomegranate juice you buy is pasteurized, cooking the flavor into a vegetal stew-y mess that also destroys the seductive fuchsia color.  in making grenadine most people also concentrate the extract of their juice by reducing it with heat.  like maple syrup flavors are lost and flavors are created.  i’d say more is lost…

my plan was to use the “ice wine technique” to concentrate the flavor.  i was going to simply juice fresh pomegranates,  freeze concentrate the juice one iteration, hopefully increasing extract potency by at least 50% and finally sugaring to approximately 40 brix. (a 40 brix syrup is a great contrast for an equal volume of lemon or lime juice)

a friend told me that i could simply quarter the fruit and put it through a lemon juicer.  it worked pretty well but i deviated slightly by using the “flat on flat” adapter on my orange x brand juicer instead of the usual cone in a cup mechanism.  the fruit i got was smaller than normal and i was still able to extract 2 oz. of juice per pomegranate.  i froze the juice in half quart containers then let 50% of the juice thaw (i poked holes in the container) into a one cup sized container (the frozen juice separates from the thawed juice through the holes or by just opening the lid and dumping into the new container what thaws).  what was separated was mostly a plug of clear slush from juice that tasted significantly more concentrated.  i forgot to test the starting sugar content but my post thaw sugar content was 19.5 brix.  (i think pomegranate juice is usually in the low teens)  i brought it up slowly to 40 brix by stirring in white sugar and remeasuring. (it took less than 5 minutes to hit my mark perfectly)

(i tested the end results of my second batch and the 50% i kept had a brix of 22 while the 50% i discarded had a brix of 3.5 which mean i probably started at 12 brix. a killer boost of concentration for one iteration! sugar doesn’t mean much when i’m really looking for extract but i think i can assume it follows suit)

i didn’t have any fresh eggs but wanted to make something pink lady esque for my first drink.

.75 oz. lemon juice

.75 oz. ice wine grenadine

.5 oz. cognac

1.5 oz. tanqueray gin

for starters the color is mind blowing.  i’ve never witnessed a drink with a prettier hue.   the tonal qualities of the grenadine are amazing.  the simple familiar contrast of the gin and cognac really elevate the unique fruit expression.  the sugar ethic is perfect as well to maximize flavor enlivenment. delightful.

May 20, 2009

fenaroli’s handbook of flavor ingredients

fenaroli’s handbook of flavor ingredients is a reference in amerine’s bibliography of vermouth.  the abstract did not make it seem useful so i didn’t even highlight it but wow…

i came across fenaroli’s work by exploring the search term “flavor contrast”.  the book, over all, is a sprawling mess of artificial flavors and chemistry that is beyond me, but then it breaks into a chapter on bitter flavors.  the tone shows that fenaroli had a soft spot for the subject.  i won’t plageurize too much because the book (volume II) is available for preview on google books and the chapter on bitter flavors starts on page 600 and goes to about 616.

what makes the work so remarkable is that fenaroli makes an attempt (its not great, but an attempt none the less) to tackle “arrangement” and the interaction of bitter flavors with others.  the chapter notes that creating bitter beverages is difficult because we are bound by tradition.  It is noted that britian and america have really only seemed to accept quinine bitters while other styles that are really important to western europe didn’t gain much main stream traction.

fenaroli points out that “bitters” is a “hardly useful” term because it is such a broad range of flavors and some seemingly similar face different acceptance by cultures.

the chapter eventually gets down to the nitty gritty and breaks down specific botanicals.  some botanicals are pointed out to be “aromatic-bitter” and some are plain “bitter”. similar to the works of harold mcgee, complementary flavors are broken down into “aromatic”, “pungent”, and “sweet”.  commonly used ingredients are described in tables similar to amerine’s but fenaroli also points out that a few botanicals may also have a “terpeneless” option (bitter orange, sweet orange, mint).  i’ve seen terpene removal described in many sources but no one ever describes the sensory differences.  is cointeau terpeneless and what about clement’s creole shrubb? is it for shelf stability so nothing separates due to storage temperature fluxes?  i’ve seen terpenes separate from gin concentrates i’ve made.

one of the first details of arrangements claims that vanilla, licorice, star anise, and anise can be used as “sweeteners” to create contrasting effect in slightly pungent or sharp flavors such as thyme, peppermint, ceylon cinnamon, nutmeg, grains of paradise, clove buds, cardamom, juniper, mace, and ginger.

fenaroli talks of “exclusively bitter flavors” but doesn’t really explain what to do with them. “tonic action” is also mentioned as a property of some botanicals buts its not clear what is meant.  tonic could mean any short term medicinal value or maybe “tone-ic” for an ability to change a shade of flavor.  sour orange peel often augments the fruit of a wine base but is also a known appetite suppressant.

the chapter goes on to talk about the structural decisions of making bitter beverages and breaks products down to styles that mainly deal with the level of extract and intensity of bitter.  the classifications are fairly simple: white dry vermouths, white, hightly aromatic vermouths, white lightly aromatic vermouths, red vermouths, red bitter vermouths, and cinchona-flavored red vermouths.  a chart adapted to the classifications shows where many botanicals fit, but ultimitely does not seem too useful.

a really unique tidbit from the chapter claims that its “possible to employ flavor distillates in all bitter formulations to create special effects”.  this may mean that you can distill a bitter botanical like wormwood to increase the aroma but lose the bitter principle.

fenaroli goes on to randomly point out a few botanical series that supposedly show great affinity.  unfortunately they do not reveal too much logic in their construction.

“angelica with: balm, cardamom, coriander, hyssop, marjoram, mint, thyme, vanilla.”

“calamus with: cardamom, cinnamon, mace or nutmeg, zedoary; or: calumba, camomile, cascarilla, cinchona, larch agaric, and rhubarb.”

“chamomile with: artichoke, bitter orange, cinchona, genepi, gentian, gentian (stemless), mint, summer savory.”

“cascarilla with: bitter and sweet orange, calamus, chinotti, cinnamon, grains of paradise, lemon, nutmeg, thyme.”

“centuary with: calamus, cinchona, condurango, gentian, gentian (stemless); or: bitter and sweet orange, cardamom, clove, lemon, locorice, mace.”

“condurango with: bitter orange, cardamom, chicory, cinchona, dandelion, lemon, rhubarb.”

some of the ingredients i’ve either never heard of (condurango, larch agaric) or i have no experience with (summer savory, centuary) but overall from my limited experience, the series try to create a terraced dynamic amoung the contrasts.

the chapter goes on to repeat some the counterintuitive advice amerine gives that tinctures should be between 21-30% in alcohol.  fenaroli adds to the advice by claiming alcohol content should be considered in the final formulation because it may enhance certain notes.  so the ever clear comes in after you’ve made your extraction to increase the proof.  sugar content should also be considered because it “contrasts the bitter bouquet”.

another variable, rarely applicable today, is that flavors obtained vary with carbonation.  carbonation has a two fold effect.  according to fenaroli, “desensitization of the taste buds following an initial temporary stimulative effect, carbon dioxide also reacts chemically with the constituents of the flavor complex”.  in the cocktail context there isn’t much room to age bitter sodas, but i wonder what happens when you compare flat normal campari to a sample that was whipped with a whisk.  this would impact the percpetion of shaken or stirred drinks.

the chapter moves more into formulations and arrangement with fenaroli making some interesting analysis. “therefore, formulations in most cases are hinged on the combination either of bitter flavors with citrus notes or of aromatic notes with bitter flavors”.  i think this simply means you need contrast.  amer picon or cynar is an example of a bitter paired with citrus and fernet is an example of bitter with aromatic.  fenaroli interestingly goes into more deal on fernet and aperol.”

“fernet formulation, the flavor contrast lies between mint and saffron and related variations,  such as anise and saffron.  in aperol, select, and other similiar products, the basic flavor ingredients consists of a blend of soluble essential oils of sweet and bitter orange together with added amounts of vanilla or vanillin; the bitter principle consists of a complex bitter flavor formulated by using some of the herbs listed in table 5.”. nothing monumental, but the specific examples support show how one bitter focuses on aromatic accompaniments and there other citrus and “sweeteners”.

“in fernet, which is flavored with the characteristic aromatic note based on saffron and mint combinations, neither citrus nor other essential oils are used (escept for mint essential oil).  the bitter flavor usually is obtained with a few herbs used in suitable ratios, such as angelica (roots), calamus, calumba, camomile, centaury, cinchona, gentian, imperatoria, larch agaric, rhubarb, st. johnswort, and zedoary to which aloe and myrrh resinoid are added.  a large mint-to-bitter-complex ratio yields mint-flavored fernet types.  the flavor of products with a definite basic note (anise, artichoke, cinchona, gentian, rhubarb, etc) is rounded and upgraded using notes strictly dependent on the background note. this leaves very little room for variations and, therefore, permits only the addition of notes to refine and characterize the finished product.”

wow, the last passage is a mouthful but really explains how arrangements can change, creating new products like adapting fernet branca to branca menta.  the bitters principles are also build from many botanicals to make a sensation broader and more crescendoed.  i’m not sure how a botanical could be strictly dependant on a “background” note limiting the potential of the blend but its interesting to see a logic emerging however unclear it is.

fenaroli definitely leaves something to be desired but its interesting to see a new and very analytical take on the subject.

December 28, 2008

promotions…

Filed under: traditions — Tags: , — sjs @ 7:45 pm

so after many years of mainly making drinks to amuse myself, i’m finally starting to do more of it for others… i just took over the bar at restaurant dante in cambridge, ma. tuesday night through saterday night. i’ve avoided the responsibility for quite a while but in this recession the city needs more options for a solid & affordable good time…

my first order of business was to drastically slash prices and do away with all the $12 drinks… we are offering six $8 classics (old fashioned, sazerac, manhattan, french 75, dark & stormy, mojito) as your right to a well made affordable drink on american soil. for the more experimental cocktail lovers there are going to be quite a few other rotating $10 options that reflect a little more decadence. these have a big emphasis on single malts, amaroes, and especially aromatized wines…

we also have an incredible new bar menu. gorgeous tapas-like options that the italians call “sfizi”, already famous bites like mini burgers ($6) and mini steak frites ($7), and even my favorite the $3 a la carte artisinal cheese selection.

our beer options will get better (i need two more weeks) with an emphasis less on overly malty styles and more on elegance like imperial pilsners and extra hoppy styles of pale ale.

wines by the glass are already second to none in our budget class. (we spend way too many man hours tracking them down) we’ve added more options in the $9-11 category and have added more mature and epic wines by the glass like our current 2000 chateau fortia chateauneuf du pape from a magnum for $15!…

one slight downside is that my budget sucks (because we are opening a highly anticipated awesome new restaurant in belmont in the next two months! hooray!). so you will not find every bottling of van winkle or every barrel proof whiskey that i drink at home (and would die to serve at the bar)… most regrettably you will not see anything from haus alpenze being mixed (fucking tragic!) or anything i distilled because its illegal… there is no cold draft ice… but you will see fair prices, serious ingenuity, and my dry sense of humor and good looks (jason’s too)…

so now our prices are in the ball park of the awesome green street and our food can give any place in the city a run for its money in price to quality. we look forward to seeing all of you soon…

and yes rumors are true, i am going to start doing a couple dollar oyster nights a week…

November 21, 2008

bombardino!

a classic italian high proof eggyolk amaro

for 500 ml of zwack unicum (i want to use fernet but i’m using the unicum because i have a bottle, i fear it, and i need to figure out how to use it… it has comparable sugar and alcohol content to fernet)

guides suggest a minimum of 14% alcohol which definitely won’t be a problem using zwack unicum or fernet branca… guides also call for 140g/l of egg yolks and 150g/l of sugar. with a little bit of hydrometer work and some extrapolation we find that zwack already rings in at 7 brix or so wich may only be about 70g/l (very imprcise).

to make 500 ml

70g egg yolks (really five yolks @ 77.2 g)

50g sugar

450ml or so of amaro.

.5 g of vitamin c powder as an antioxidant (which i’m pretty sure is significant to maraschino cherries)

dissolve the sugar first into the alcohol (with patience) then slowly integrate the alcohol into the egg yolks.

these are the recommended proportions of an old agricultural science manuel. upon tasting it i like the new mouthfeel and see a contribution from the yolks but i really feel i need more. (if not 7 more yolks!) at its present state i don’t see how the liqueur would hold its own to coffee. seven more yolks will even probably increase the volume by less than 100ml.

another 103.7 g of egg yolks…

!! totally worth using the 175g or so of yolks.

because i’m making this really quickly is have some undissolved sugar (due to a lack of patience) and maybe some burnt yolk for the initial high alcohol. like in a zabaglione i can get rid of most of this by passing it all through a bullion strainer.

there is surprisingly quite a lot of the strainer to remove but the final product is pretty cool. strong but tamed by the texture of the yolks. a feroicious amaro becomes much more approachable… now lets see how long it will keep.

i have no coffee but it adds a delicious complexity to earl grey tea…

*****update*****

so i managed to drink this with some coffee and it was a delicious rich alternate to cream with extra flavor contrast. i have not worked intimitly with advocaat and have no understanding of how stable it is but i do notice little flecks of egg yolk separating and i fear it may be from alcohol levels being higher than is stable. the particles can be easily strained off but its not that aesthetically pleasing. next time i may dilute the intensity of the alcohol with some water. fernet is full flavored enough that it won’t harm it too much.

****update****

i was trying to make this to drink for a small newspaper article on winter egg drinks… i didn’t use the fortified yolk liqueur but merely a quick zabaglione with four yolks, 2 table spoons of sugar, 2 oz. of fernet, 2 oz. of white wine. the results were really great in hot coffee. awesome flavor contrast and a certain richness that kicks my ass if obtained through cream… it even works well in iced coffee.

****update****

so many people search for a bombardino recipe according to my blog statistics… of course nearly no one comments on anything… what exactly are you looking for? and how do you know of the drink? strangely the drink is rather common on european restaurant menus relative to its obscurity here in america… any insights on this tradition?

July 1, 2008

cerises au soleil

Filed under: traditions — Tags: , , — sjs @ 8:07 pm

in the last couple weeks many forces have been preventing me from making it to hay market but today i finally got there… after checking out all the vendors, i bought four pounds of cherries for two dollars a pound (two pounds of rainier, two pounds of bing).

cherries are not a big part of my diet and i usually only ingest their flavors through wine. the rainier cherries are quite sweet relative to the bing and my understanding is that the peak of their season is in july. in wine i’d say you might experience the rainier flavor in the fruit of a lightly extracted rose. the bing variety has the most stunning sour quality and are really refreshing. they are really juicy in flavor and i think i should eat more of them… bing cherry as a wine descriptor is thrown around quite a lot, but i can’t think of any wine that truly captures their flavor which is quite concentrated. a very young dolcetto would be the best bet. the piave liqueur “elisir gambrinus” synthesizes a bing or probably better yet “marasca” cherry like flavor by reducing the wine of the weed grape ribasso. only after concentrating the flavors (it makes a bland wine on average), does it come close to the intensity of a raw cherry.

so i bought all these cherries because one of my favorite discoveries of last year was the provencial specialty called “cerises au soleil” or “cherries of the sun”. in this canning tradition, the french jar cherries with sugar and eau de vie then age them on roof tops for the duration of the summer. i got a couple jars of the imported version at formaggio kitchen and used them for a special brown-forman cocktail event i did for a couple hundred people last year. the product was great but the only thing i didn’t like was that the pits of the cherries were intact making them slightly difficult to eat.

for my recipe i cleaned and pitted all four pounds of cherries and put them together in a three liter mason jar. instead of eau de vie, i added 750ml of cachaca and 750ml of stock brand maraschino liqueur because both ingredients were on hand. i then added a small fraction of the pits that i took out to add a subtle nutty character. if i smell too much of that nut character i feel like someone is trying to poison me with arsenic… (if i ever put an almond liqueur in a drink, i’d need a float of dark rum to cover up that unnerving smell). so the only sugar i’ve introduced to the cherries has come from the maraschino liqueur which is quite sweet. the sugar content is enough to make the preserving liquid dense enough to float the cherries which is not where i want to be. Herve This advises in his “molecular gastronomy” that the proper sugar content for canning fruit in syrup is one at which the fruit doesn’t all fall to the the bottom (not enough sugar) or all float (too much). this is complicated by the differing ripeness of the fruits which is exacerbated in my batch by the differing varieties (i’m not stressing, at good average is what i seek). at the moment all of my fruit is floating and i should take out some of my alcoholic syrup and add either water or more cachaca. optimizing the syrup will keep the fruit from bursting if the sugar content is too low or shriveling if it is too high. every home made maraschino cherry i’ve had has been shriveled, while the cerises au soleil from provance were perfectly shaped… (i’m also not afraid of wasting any booze to get the correct maraschino liqueur to cachaca ratio because anything i take out is going to flavor some sangria…!)

the next interesting part of the recipe to consider is the sun. submitting the jarred cherries to the elements especially sunlight induces oxidation and basically speeds up the aging process. maynard amerine describes aspects of the idea in his “technology of wine making” but doesn’t exactly recommend any of it. the technique may not create any attractive flavors in a wine or brandy but may add further sophistication to the over the top flavors of unfermented fruit… i keep putting my batch out in the sun when i work lunch while i’ve heard of other people decorating their gardens with their canning jars… time will tell exactly how much i like my domestic results…

some idea for down the road would be to augment the acidity to my liking. i really enjoy aspects of the rainier cherries but feel that they are kind of sweet. diffusing a little extra acidity through a sprinkling of malic or tartaric acid would really create a preserved yet refreshing palate cleanser… also enhancing the preservation with avante garde base spirits would be cool. a really minerally cape verdean rum or over the top peruvian pisco would add awesome sophistication.

**** update****

so mixing the two types of cherries turned out to not be a great idea because their colors became kind of homogeneous and they definitely had drastically different densities therefore requiring different amounts of sugar (half sunk and half floated). i do think they taste good but for some reason the cherries taste far more alcoholic than the liquid they are in and i have no idea why. another problem is that the cherries at the very top of the jar have browned due to oxidation. none of the imported cerises au soleil browned even though there was no preservative listed and the jars were not even filled to the top. how did they do it?

i found a clue in the electronic addition of “artisan distilling” by Kris Arvid Berglund. Berglund provides a small and very useful guide for small distilleries that is definitely worth checking out. An interesting part of the guide describes the tradition of the pear in the bottle of eau de vie and what it really takes to make it stick. Apparently an 80 spirit isn’t enough to really preserve a fruit and prevent browning. For starters Burglund recommends a 45% alcohol spirit. Then very surprisingly to me Burglund recommends filling the bottles with a 1% sulfuric acid solution and letting it stand for one hour. the bottles are then thoroughly rinsed with softened water. 1 gram of ascorbic acid is dissolved in every liter of fortifying brandy. After filling the bottles Burgland recommends to vacuum out the oxigen as well with something like a water jet pump or maybe a vin vac (i have no idea how you would do it to a canning jar). Another surprise to the story is that often the fruit has to wait in the jar quite a while before the eau de vie is even ready for it. to preserve it in the mean time a solution of 10g citric acid, 1g ascorbic acid, and 100 mg SO2 (=2ml SO2 solution 5%) per liter which can supposedly preserve the fruit for up to six months while the eau de vie is being produced.

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