Saturday, October 26, 2019

Wildflower Manhattan

We had a lovely signature cocktail on Thursday night at Fish Bones in Chelmsford. Gerry asked the waitress the ratio of bourbon, Vermouth and other ingredients and we made a very similar, delicious drink at home that we are calling the Wildflower Manhattan.

We love Trader Joe’s Amarena cherries and they are a key to this drink. Fresh rosemary adds to the Wildflower version. 

4.5 oz Bulleit Bourbon
1 oz Sweet Vermouth
1 oz Luxardo liqueuer 
1 oz Amarena cherry syrup
10 dashes cherry bitters
2 Amarena cherries
I sprig fresh rosemary


Sunday, October 6, 2019

Corned Beef - It's Not Just for St. Patrick's Day

Corned Beef Soup and Apple Pie. What better fall soup and dessert!

Of course, in the US, we tend to think of corned beef on a St. Patrick's Day menu. Ah, but that's not what the Irish do. In fact, when we lived in Ireland we were never served corned beef, nor did we find it on a restaurant menu. Corned beef was used to substitute bacon by the Irish immigrants in this country in the late 1800s. There's the connection. Corned beef is good anytime!

There are two cuts of corned beef - the flat cut that has a more consistent thickness or the point which has lots of inter-muscular fat or marbling. Then again, you can buy the whole brisket with both types in one piece.

I chose a hardy package of the flat. I popped it into my crockpot on low with a quart of chicken stock and left it to slow-cook for about 12 hours. I turned it over a few times before it was done; I took the entire piece out and sliced it into what were very tender cubes of stringed corned beef. I cut up about six peeled carrots, sliced half a cabbage and cut them into 1-inch pieces, and added about eight Yukon gold potatoes, unpeeled. I added a quart of beef bone broth, some chopped onion, celery and mustard seeds, parsley and chives with bay leaves, salt and pepper and cooked it all until it was tender. I added the beef and cooked all of it on low for a few hours before serving. I wish I'd had caraway seeds to toss in, but I didn't. It was yummy anyway.

Apple Pie Spice

I can't find Apple Pie Spice in the stores, anymore. Plenty of that pumpkin stuff, but no apple. Why, you may say, do you need Apple Pie Spice when you can just add the spices that are listed in a recipe? Well, my apple pie doesn't follow a recipe and I want to throw in a good combination of spices all at once without measuring. (Normally, two tablespoons can be added in lieu of your usual spices.) I like cardamom. It's expensive, but the taste is a good addition. My apple pie spice includes it, nutmeg, allspice, ginger and the requisite major spice - cinnamon. 8 tablespoons ground cinnamon 3 teaspoons ground nutmeg 3 teaspoons ground cardamom 2 teaspoon ground ginger 1 teaspoon ground allspice Mix it well and store in a glass container. Makes 2/3 cup.