Dragon Con Apple Pie Moonshine

A favorite at Dragon Con, with a special secret ingredient to jazz it up a bit.

Ingredients

  • 64 oz Apple Juice
  • 64 oz Apple Cider
  • 400 ml Ever clear (190 proof)
  • 200 ml flavored whiskey or schnapps
  • ½ cup brown sugar
  • 3 cinnamon sticks
  • 1 vanilla bean

Directions

Combine ingredients in a large stockpot and story to dissolve the sugar. Simmer 1 to 2 hours over low heat until the spices are fragrant. Do not boil.

Cool to 170°F and ladle into clean mason jars. Seal jars and rest in a cool, dark cupboard or refrigerate. Keeps several weeks.

Serve warmed, or over ice.

Bloody Mary Mix #9: Chesapeake

Pickled pepper brine, prepared horseradish and Old Bay make up the backbone of this tangy and slightly spicy mix.

Use reduced sodium vegetable juice to account for the considerable amount of salt in the other ingredients.

Ingredients

  • 600 ml low sodium V-8 vegetables juice
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tablespoon pickled pepper brine (substitute with a vinegar based hot sauce)
  • 2 tablespoons Old Bay
  • 1½ tablespoons prepared horseradish
  • 1 teaspoon cracked black pepper

Directions

Combine ingredients in a mason jar. Cover and shake vigorously.

Combine 3:2 with vodka over ice. Garnish with celery and serve chilled.

Bloody Mary Mix #4

Note: this recipe has ‘bright, high’ notes from the citrus, balanced against savory flavors from the brown sauces.

Adjust for salt by substituting celery seed for celery salt, and/or use reduced salt soy sauce.

  • 200ml V8 original
  • 50ml Cholula Hot Sauce, Chili & Garlic flavor
  • 50ml lemon juice
  • 25ml reduced sodium soy sauce
  • 25ml Worcestershire sauce
  • 25ml Apple Cider Vinegar
  • 1 tsp celery salt (sub 1 tsp celery seed)
  • 1 teaspoon horse radish
  • ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • ½ teaspoon granulated garlic
  • 2 dashes fish sauce

Combine in a shaker pint, shaking vigorously to combine.

Combine 4:1 with vodka, shaken over ice and serve garnished with celery, etc.

Strawberry Daqueri (classic)

  • 1 lime, juiced
  • 2 medium strawberries, sliced
  • 1 oz simple syrup
  • 3 oz silver rum (or preference)
  • 1 strawberry for garnish
  • Sugar

Split a whole ripe strawberry leaving the crown intact, and wet the rim of a rocks glass. Rim the glass with turbinado sugar.

Muddle 2 medium strawberries with the juice of 1 lime in a cocktail shaker. Add simple syrup, rum and ice. Shake and pour into the glass. Garnish with the strawberry.

Bloody Mary mix #1

Makes approximately 750mL of Bloody Mary mix.

This has an intense salty and savory flavor by itself which it is normally diluted into a cocktail.

Ingredients

  • 500mL V8 or tomato juice
  • 100mL beef broth
  • 50mL dry vermouth
  • 50mL Worcestershire sauce
  • 25mL soy sauce
  • 25mL lime juice
  • 6 dashes fish sauce
  • 6 dashes hot sauce
  • 2 tsp prepared horseradish
  • 1 tsp celery salt
  • 1 tsp celery seed
  • ½ tsp ground oregano
  • ½ tsp ground black pepper
  • ½ tsp granulated garlic
  • ½ tsp granulated onion
  • ¼ tsp smoked paprika
  • Salt to taste

Combine ingredients in a jar and shake well. Rest 30 minutes before serving to allow dry ingredients to rehydrate.

Store refrigerated up to 1 week.

Long Island Iced Tea

For 1 serving, use 25 mL or ¾ oz measures

  • 1 part neutral vodka
  • 1 part neutral white rum
  • 1 part neutral silver tequila
  • 1 part neutral gin
  • 1 part top-shelf orange curaçao (e.g., Cointreau or Gran Gala)
  • 2 parts sour mix (2 parts 50:50 simple syrup, 1 part lemon juice, 1 part lime juice)
  • Cola to taste

Combine alcohols and sour mix in a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake vigorously for 20 seconds, and pour into a pint glass. Top up with cola. Garnish with a citrus round.

Ginger Ale

A fermented ginger beer style ginger ale.

Ingredients

  • 1/4 -1/2 cup ginger chopped (the more the better!)
  • 2 lemons
  • 1 lime
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1/4 teaspoon champagne yeast
  • 1 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon anise seed
  • 1 tablespoon orange peel

Directions

Simmer half of the ginger in about 3 cups water for 30 minutes.

Put the rest of the ginger in a measuring cup with the juice of the lemons and lime.

After 25 minutes add the sugar/honey/pepper/anise/orange peel.

After the 30 minutes is up take pan off heat and add tartar/ground ginger/cloves.

Cool until lukewarm. Add water to 2 Liter soda bottle, pour in lemon juice/rest of ginger. Add liquid in the pan to the bottle. Add yeast, top bottle leaving 1-2 inches.

Credit to paulb39 on Reddit, “Perfected my ginger ale recipe 😀

Limoncello #2

Another variant on Lemoncello.

Ingredients

  • 1.75 L Everclear
  • 12-15 unmarked, unblemished lemons
  • 7 cups water
  • 4 2/3 cups sugar

Instructions

  • Wash the lemons with hot water, removing any wax. Be careful not to damage the skin.
  • Using a citrus zester or chef’s microplane, remove the yellow zest, and set aside. Try not to score too deeply into the pith (white part) of the rind, as it will bitter the product
  • Combine the alcohol and zest in a large jar. Seal and store in a cool dark place for 20-40 days. Allow to macerate. Give it a good shake once or twice during the first week.

On bottling day, prepare the simple syrup. Combine sugar and water in large saucepan and stir over medium heat until solution clarifies. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature (2 hours). Measures above yield about 2.5L.

When the syrup is cool, strain the zest out of the alcohol mixture. A coffee filter works well, and can be supported in a strainer or a funnel.

Combine the alcohol and syrup in a vessel large enough to accommodate the alcohol and the syrup.
-or-
Combine measured amounts of syrup and alcohol in screw-top bottles using 3:2 sugar-alcohol ratio.

[Optional] Store bottles in a cool, dark place to rest for another 20-40 days. This allows flavors to “marry” in the bottle, and lends a smoother product.

Store one bottle in the freezer and serve ice cold in a shot glass or small cordial.

Some notes:

  • You want to start with a neutral alcohol, the higher proof the better. Higher alcohol content will leach the oils out of the lemon rind more quickly. I use Everclear. Things finish up in about 3 weeks, but I give it the full 40 just because.
  • Higher proofs call for more lemons, because you’ll cut it down more at the end for a “sane” proof. This dilutes the lemon flavor.
  • Pick 12 unmarked, unblemished lemons. Try to avoid lemons that are still green, have been stamped, bruised or have dark spots. You’re going to use the outermost layer of the fruit, so you’ll want to work with the best you can find.
  • You’re going to have a lot of nude lemons laying around. They’re good for gin & tonic, marinade or whatever else. If you can’t use them immediately, the juice lasts longer in a bottle than it does in a denuded lemon.
  • The simple syrup mix is subjective. Some people like sweeter cello, and use a water-sugar ratio of 1 part water, 1 part sugar. I found that to be a little too sweet for my tastes, and thinned out to 3 parts water 2 parts sugar. I’ve seen some recipes that go out as far as 2 parts water to 1 part sugar. It’s up to you. You’ll just need a working volume to hit your target alcohol content. (see below)

One thing I’ve found is it’s hard to target a given volume of syrup. The sugar loses volume when it dissoves, and again when it heats. In general, I think you lose about 25% of the sugar volume to solution and heating. You’ll have to play around and see.

  • Alcohol content. You probably know that the “proof” value on the bottle is twice the value of the alcohol by volume (ABV). So, 100 proof is 50% ABV. Most lemoncello sold commercially has a bottle proof of 60 to 70, or is between 30 and 35% ABV. I like mine a little stronger, around 80 proof which is the proof at which most liquor is sold. Everclear is 195 proof, or about 97.5% ABV. I like using Everclear because (1) it makes the math easy and (2) when cut down to bottle proof, it yields a larger volume. Good for storing and good for gifts.

When I’m done macerating the fruit rinds and strain the alcohol out, I get a hair less than 1750mL in the jar, and it’s still at 97%. I want to target 80 proof (40%) so I just divide the volume (1750) by the target proof to get a total volume of 4375mL, or 4.375L. I need to add 2.625L of volume to my 1.75L of “pure,” 97% alcohol cut down to roughly 80 proof. If you have a big pot, bottling bucket or lemonade tun, you can just dump everything into the pot, mix it up, and then pour it into the bottles. If not, then you need to mix measured ratios into your bottles. With Everclear, it’s an easy 3 parts syrup to 2 parts alcohol mix. (60-40– see?)

When working with lower proof alcohols, part of the “cut” is already done. It complicates the math. If you started with 100 proof vodka, and just cut it in half, you’d have 50 proof limoncello. Your need to adjust your sugar ratio, too.

For a given volume of 100-proof vodka, it’s 50% water by volume.