Vital Information wrote:
His advice was to use grain alcohol instead of vodka. He felt you get a better extraction of flavor and less chance of secondary fermentation.
I have to say that the batch I sampled yesterday was a bit too harsh, and I believe I need to cut down on my infusion period--these went for a week.
That's probably the grain alcohol. It's higher proof, so you may need to cut it with something --
vodka or even water.
What I liked most about these
strawberry spirits is the fresh-fruit flavor -- and the quick turnaround.
David Hammond wrote:
LAZ's strawberry beverage was excellent, though I was suprised to hear that the fruit was transformed into something unappetizing. I used chapulin's very similar receipe for cherry liqueur, and the cherries were quite tasty on ice cream or alone -- and the liquor was killer. Perhaps it is due to the cellulose structure (which I don't really understand), but cherries definitely respond to this preparation differently than strawberries.
If you mean
the recipe here, it may be the different denser structure of cherries, but it may have something to do with adding the sugar at the outset, too.
Most of what I've read about
vodka and fruit infusions is that the fruit becomes inedible, since it acts as a sponge for the harsher elements in the liquor.
"A lot of girls come in and say, 'I want a piece of pineapple!' I have to say, 'No you don't,' '' Bush said. "It just tastes like a vodka sponge at this point. I say, 'I'll give it to you, but it's disgusting.' ''
This common exchange at the Sliver Palm, a River West bar and restaurant, reflects both an ignorance and growing interest in what Bush says is the next phase in Chicago's alcohol appetite -- the homemade infused alcohol.
Infusing liquor is a process that involves taking a large container, filling it with pieces of fruit and alcohol and letting it sit for at least a week. The vodka takes on the flavor of the fruit, which only becomes usable for soon-to-be sour-faced, overly curious customers.
Of course, some trends don't work for everyone. Peter Laffoon, owner of Hamburger Mary's, downtown, began infusing vodka with raspberries and strawberries five months ago. But he stopped when he realized how much vodka he lost when he threw away the soused fruit.
"It was fun for a while," Laffoon says. "And it is good. Who knows, we might do it again."
http://www.infusionsofgrandeur.net