Tag: cider

Hot Spiced Cider

by on Dec.06, 2011, under beverage, Uncategorized

The Christmas season is in full swing, and at our house one of the things that means is the drinking of copious amounts of hot, spiced cider. For as long as I can remember the holidays, both Christmas and Thanksgiving…and many of the days inbetween, were accompanied by the the sweet, heady smells of a pot of spiced cider warming away on the stove top. To this day, it just doesn’t seem like the Christmas season without having brewed up a gallon or two of one of my favorite drinks.

While we’re on the subject of cider, I want to rant just a little (and I think I’ve voiced this rant before so I’ll make it short). It drives me nuts, walking through the grocery store and seeing bottles of clear, amber liquid that companies are passing off as cider. Sorry, but it looks and tastes like ordinary apple juice and has about as much in common with real cider as does Grape juice. Cider should be brown and cloudy with a body and mouth feel that apple juice can only wish it could attain to. I even have a problem with “pastuerized” cider, but I understand that some people are concerned about food borne illnesses. But please, if you have never tasted fresh, unpastuerized cider before, check it out. You’re in for a treat. The real stuff, when made properly has a complexity that is totally lost in the pastuerization process.

It’s the holidays so enough ranting and more holiday cheer! You’ll notice, in the picture, that there is a distinctive red hue to that mug of cider. Don’t adjust your computer monitors, it’s supposed to be that way. I often like to add “Red Hots” candies (you know, those little, red, firery, cinnamon candies). They add a nice festive hue to the cider and help bump up the cinnamon in the drink. If you don’t want to use the candies, and sometimes I don’t, just up the number of cinnamon sticks you add to the cider to compensate for the lack of cinnamon flavoring.

Once made, you can ladel it into mugs and serve as is, for the children and teetotallers in your group or you can do as most of the members of my family do and spice with a shot of bourbon or dark rum. A few of those and I guarentee that you’ll get a party started!

This recipe uses a gallon of cider as I find that it can go pretty quickly, but you can easily adjust to make the amount you need. Also I just toss in all the spices. If you’d rather not fish around trying not to ladel up allspice berries and cloves you can tie them up in a coffee filter and just remove the whole thing after about 30-60 minutes.

Hot Spiced Cider
makes just over 1 gallon

1 gallon Cider
4 each Cinnamon sticks
1 Tbl. Whole Cloves
2 Tbl. Whole Allspice Berries
1 (12oz.) can Orange Juice Concentrate
3-4 oz. Red Hots candies (the little red cinnamon candies)

Place all ingredients in a nonreactive pot and simmer, without boiling for, at least, 30 minutes. Ladel into mugs and serve. Feel free to add a shot of bourbon or rum for a more adult beverage, or experiment with any of the various flavored alcohols out there. If you come across a really great combination let me know. If so desired, garnish the mugs with an orange wheel and a cinnamon stick for stirring.

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Wild Rice Stuffed Squash

by on Nov.04, 2010, under sides, vegetables

Well, it’s been just over a month since my last post. Anyone miss me? Sorry for the unannounced vacation but it was much needed. It has been a very surreal month. On the up side my wife and I took our daughter to Walt Disney World for a week, and man we had a blast. On the down side both sides of our family experienced a loss this past month. My wife lost her father to lung cancer, at age 65 and my family lost one of my cousins due to stomach cancer, at age 47. Needless to say, it has been a tough month and in light of all that has gone on, this blog just hasn’t seemed that important. These deaths have affected me more than I expected them to. They’ve really made me sit back and spend a good amount of time contemplating my own existence. Both these individuals were outgoing, gregarious individuals. They often became the center of attention when they entered a room. Not because they put themselves in that position but because their easy going, charasmatic personalities just naturally put them at the center of attention. Both Bill and Chris were amazing people and the world lost 2 wonderful individuals when they passed away. They will be missed by me, my family, and many, many others whose lives they have touched.

Needless to say, there hasn’t been a whole lot of cooking going on this past month, or at least not much that really warrented a blog entry, but it hasn’t been a complete waste of a month either. At the end of September I did receive my half pig that my buddy had raised. I haven’t had a chance to do a lot with it, yet, though I do have plans for a lot of great things. One thing I did have a chance to do was to break down the whole saddle, which includes the whole loin, the tenderloin, and a portion of the ribs. Out of that I got 4-5 pound bone-in roast, a 3-4 pound bonless roast, 6 nice sized pork chops, the tenderloin, 5+ pounds of stew meat and about 5 pounds of good trim to make sausage.

That night we cooked up the tenderloin. I kept it simple as I wanted to get a good taste of the pork, so I simply seasoned it with salt and pepper and pan roasted the whole tenderloin to about MW. The pork was fantastic!!! Tender, juicy, and full of flavor, way more flavor than you can ever get out of mass raised, grocery store pork. I definately made out on this deal!

To accompany the pork I wanted something very seasonal so I created this recipe. Not only does this side dish go well with just about any pork dish, but it would be fantasic with just about any poultry or wild fowl also.

Wild Rice Stuffed Squash
serves 4

4 Carnival squash, individual sized (or 2 acorn squash, cut in half)
1 cup wild rice
4 Tbsp. cider syrup (if you can’t find cider syrup use real maple syrup instead)
2 Tbsp. butter
salt
pepper
3/4 cups dried cranberries
1/2 cup toasted pecan pieces

Cook the wild rice in 4 cups water until the rice has popped open and is tender. Meanwhile preheat the oven to 350°F. Cut the tops off of the squash and trim a bit off of the bottom so the squashes sit upright. Scoop out the seeds and membrane. Divide the syrup and butter among the 4 squashes and season with salt and pepper. Place in a roasting pan, add 1/2 cup of water, cover with foil and bake until just tender (about 30 minutes). Remove from oven and uncover. When rice is done drain off all liquid and add the dried cranberries. Pour any remaining liquid, from the squash, into the rice, taste and season with salt and pepper. Stir in the pecans. Pack rice into the squash cavitites and mound on top. Place squash back into roasting pan, gently cover with foil and return to oven just to reheat (about 10-15 minutes). Transfer to individual plates and serve.

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Milwaukee Winter Farmers’ Market

by on Mar.09, 2010, under sustainable farming, thoughts, travel, Wisconsin

Okay, it’s a little late in the season, but I just recently discovered the Milwaukee Winter Farmers’ Market and I wish I had learned about it earlier! I came across it quite by accident as I was searching to see if there were any producers of hard cider here, in Wisconsin. I found one producer, Aeppel Treow Winery, which produces bothapple wine and hard cider. In their information I also discovered that they were at the Milwaukee Winter Farmers’ Market on the first Saturday of every month. Bonus, not only had I come across a producer of hard cider, but I also “discovered” a new, off season farmers’ market.

The market is held every Saturday, through April 24th, at the Tommy Thompson Youth Center at State Fair Park. You can access it through Gate 5, on 84th St. While not large, I was impressed by the variety of Wisconsin grown and raised products. Besides, the hard cider and apple wine, there was an apple orchard that still had apples for sale. These over wintered apples were starting to just show their age and were a bit on the mealy side, but they were still sweet and quite flavorful. A little mealiness is small price to pay for their taste which beats any store bought apples hands down. Also included in the days list of producers were a couple of honey producers, a couple of bakeries, numerous farmer’s selling pasture fed beef, pork, poultry and elk, and a few stands selling processed foods made from local, Wisconsin produce, from salsas and jams to pasta and granola.

Rolling Meadows Sorghum Mill is there selling their sorghum syrup and locally produced maple syrup. Of the few cheese producers there, we stopped at Saxon Homstead Creamery and picked up a wedge of their “Saxony” cheese, a washed rind cow’s milk cheese, which they describe as nutty and supple, a description that may be rather vague, but one I agree with. I will definitely be checking out some of their other cheeses. We also picked up some mushrooms from River Valley Ranch, Wisconsin’s oldest mushroom producer.

There wasn’t much in the way of produce, but I didn’t expect to find much at this time of year, in Wisconsin. But a few farmers were displaying some fresh spinach and radishes grown, I’m sure in hoop houses or hot houses.

While I didn’t purchase any, it did get me excited for spring to arrive and the farmer’s markets throughout Wisconsin to get started up again.

Probably, the biggest coup for the market though this the inclusion of Bolzano Artisan Meats.  Bolzano is Wiscosin’s first and only company dedicated to the art of dry curing meat.  While still relatively unknown in throughout the rest of the country, Bolzano has, in a very short time made quite a name for themselves among upper Midwest foodies.  They currently offer guanciale, dried and cured pork cheek and panchetta, an Italian slow cured “bacon” that remains unsmoked.  Both of their products are some of the best I have tasted and I expect it won’t be long before they gain a reputation from coast to coast.

With only 7 more weeks left before the market closes for the year, I doubt I will make it back,but not for a lack of wanting. Milwaukee is about a 45-60 minute drive and our weekends are pretty full for the next 2 months. So while I might not make it back this year, I will look forward to it’s opening next October, but just because I can’t make it back doesn’t mean you shouldn’t check it out if you are in the area. You’ll be pleasantly surprised.

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Cider Donuts

by on Nov.29, 2009, under Desserts & Sweets, thoughts

Cider-Donuts-3538

When we lived in Vermont my family used to often take Sunday drives. It seems that the art of the Sunday drive has been lost. Who can blame people, seeing what the price of gas is nowadays, but I can’t help but feel saddened. People don’t know what they are missing. I loved those Sunday drives, at least in hindsight. I’m not so sure that I particularly enjoyed them at the time, but now I look back on them with fondness. Sunday drives are about the trip and not the destination. Sometimes my parents had destinations in mind and at other times we’d just drive, look at the scenery, and if we happened upon something cool or a neat little store then it was a bonus. Most times I think my dad just pointed the car in a direction and just drove randomly, though I bet he’d never admit it.

I was always thrilled when our trips wound their way down to Waterbury Center, because I knew a stop at Cold Hollow Cider Mill was imminent. It might be a tourist trap, but I loved and still love that place. As a kid, I was fascinated by watching the giant cider press turn out gallons and gallons of cider from the apple pulp they’d load in to it. I could have sat there for hours watching them press that apple pulp into one of life’s greatest treasures-cider.

The other reason I looked forward to the trip was the hot cider donuts. Crisp on the outside, soft and moist on the inside. Colored a deep brown, these donuts were packed with the flavors of autumn, from the variety of warm, sweet spices they used to the rich cider reduction used to moisten the dry ingredients. With a bribe of a few hot donuts and a couple glasses of cider my parents were assured of a little piece and quite from my brother’s and my endless verbal barrage, and I believe they took full advantage. (continue reading…)

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Cider-Bourbon Glazed Root Vegetables

by on Oct.24, 2009, under vegetables

Rst.-Root-Vegetables-3245

I hate to admit it but I am not a huge fan of vegetables. Oh, sure, they’re all right, but I would much rather fill up on starch and proteins. I know, I’m such a Midwesterner! In my defense, I have been trying to consume more vegetables in the past few months, but I still have a long way to go. There are notable exceptions to this though. Fresh, in season tomatoes, fennel, and asparagus are just a few I like and I have always loved many of the vegetables from the Brassica genus. This includes things like cauliflower, broccoli, brussels sprouts, and cabbages. It also includes many of the root vegetables that I like such as rutabagas and turnips.

Root vegetables have a pleasing sharpness that I enjoy, but they also have a wonderful, underlying sweetness. This sweetness can be developed and brought to the fore by roasting the vegetables, which is the way I prefer to cook them. In this recipe I accent that sweetness even further by glazing them with cider and a little bourbon, enrich them with a little butter and add an herbal note with fresh thyme which is still looking good, in the herb garden, despite the numerous frosts we’ve had.

Cider-Bourbon Glazed Root Vegetables

2 Tbsp. Butter, melted
2 pounds Root vegetables, peeled and cut into thick, medium length sticks (I use a mix of carrots, parsnips, rutabagas and turnips)
4 each Shallots, peeled & quartered
4 sprigs Thyme
3/4 cup Cider
2 Tbsp. Bourbon
Parsley, minced
Salt
Pepper

Preheat the oven to 400F. Toss the root vegetables with butter, to coat then place in a 9×13 baking dish. Pour cider over the vegetables and add the shallots and thyme. Season liberally with salt and pepper. Cover the pan with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the foil, add the bourbon and roast for 25-35 minutes more, stirring every 7-8 minutes. The vegetables are done when they are tender, starting to brown and the liquid as mostly evaporated, glazing the vegetables. Season again with salt and pepper, if needed and sprinkle with the minced parsley. Serves 6 as a side dish.

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Apple Pancakes with Maple-Cider Sauce

by on Oct.20, 2009, under breakfast, sauce

Apple-Pancakes-3175

I don’t eat breakfast a lot. I think I’ve said that before on this blog but it is worth repeating. Sometimes I grab a quick bowl of cereal or a piece of fruit on my way out the door, or if I have to stop for gas I might grab a donut and a coke (healthy I know!!!!), but that is pretty much it during the weekdays. On weekends we a much more likely to cook a breakfast even though that doesn’t happen regularly, but since we have the time and it is not something we do often we usually go all out and make up quite a spread. This past weekend it was I who decided to make breakfast, and since I had apples on the mind (a trip to The Littler Farmer was planned for later in the day), Apple Pancakes seemed the perfect choice. Round out the breakfast with a homemade Maple-Cider Syrup, Hungarian bacon and coffee and we were geared up for a day of cleaning out the basement and a trip out to The Little Farmer.

Maple-Cider Syrup
2 cups Cider (try to use fresh, unpasteurized, local cider though store bought cider will work fine, just stay away from Apple juice)
1 tsp. Cornstarch
1 Tbsp. Water
1/2 cup Maple Syrup
1 each Lemon wedge (lemon cut into 1/6ths)

Bring cider to a boil and reduce by 1/2 to 1 cup. Dissolve cornstarch in water and stir into cider. Return to a boil and cook 1 minute to thicken. Remove from heat and stir in maple syrup. Add lemon juice from lemon wedge to syrup and hold syrup warm.

Apple Pancakes

1 cup Flour, all-purpose
1/2 tsp. Salt
1/2 tsp. Cinnamon
3 tsp. Baking Powder
1 each Egg, beaten
1 cup Milk
1/2 cup Applesauce (if unsweetened add 1Tbsp. Granulated Sugar)
1 each Apple, peeled, cored and diced into 1/4inch cubes (chose your favorite apple, though stay away from Red & Golden Delicious as they pretty much turn to water when heated)
2 Tbsp. Butter, melted

In a small bowl combine flour, salt, cinnamon, and baking powder. In a large bowl combine egg, milk, applesauce, sugar (if using), diced apple and butter. Stir to combine. Add flour mixture to liquids and stir to bring together. Don’t over stir or pancakes will get tough. Cook, on a greased griddle, over medium to medium high heat. Flip pancakes when the edges start to look somewhat dry and the bubble that form on top burst, leaving little holes. Pancakes are best served the minute they come off the griddle but if you need to hold them until all are done, place them on a cookie sheet, cover with paper towel and put them in an over set to 175F. Makes 8 pancakes.

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