Summer is here, the trees and gardens are groaning with fruit. Are you fed up with making jam and
chutney, I am? Then try this amazing and easy to make brew.
In my local
supermarket in Ibiza the price of strawberries is staggeringly little! €1.50 for 500g of strawberries and 37.5% ABV, cheap
white rum is coming in at just €9.50 per litre.
It would be rude not to put them to good use!
Ingredients
·
1kg Strawberries (You can even use overripe, but
not mouldy ones)
·
1kg granulated sugar
·
1.5l cheap white rum
Method
·
Remove the ‘hulls’ and cut the strawberries into
halves, smaller for big berries. Don’t worry about a bit of dust on the
fruit. The alcohol will kill any bugs
and it will settle to the bottom and be decanted out when you the finish making
the product
·
Put the cut fruit into a large preserving jar as
in the photograph
·
Pour in the sugar
·
Pour in the rum
·
Shake well, immediately and then intermittently
until the sugar dissolves in the rum/fruit juice mixture.
·
Put the jar in a cool dark cupboard
·
After a week, leave the jar alone for a month or
so, longer if you have the patience. The fruit will gradually settle to the
bottom of the jar.
·
When you are happy that no more flavour can be
extracted, strain the fruit from the rum.
·
Finally return the strained rum into a clean, second,
preserving jar. Add the whipped up
whites of two eggs to the part finished rum, stir well and watch as bits of
fruit pulp and “stuff” flocculates (settles) to the bottom of the jar.
·
Allow the settling process to continue for about
a week, or until the rum above is brilliantly clear.
·
Carefully decant the clear rum into clean jugs
without disturbing the “goo,” in winemakers speak these are called the ‘lees,’ on
the jar bottom.
·
Finally bottle the finished rum in clean, clear,
used white wine bottles and seal them with plastic ‘corks.’
·
Label and date the bottles.
·
Put one in the fridge ready to drink, store
others on their sides in a wine rack.
·
Either
·
Any time - Drink iced as a shot after dinner
·
Summer - Pour over ice, add a good sprig of mint,
a slice of orange and mix 50:50 with soda water or fizzy lemonade.
NB‘s
·
More lees will appear, try to pour drinks
without disturbing them, they’ll do you no harm – it just doesn’t look good to
serve a cloudy drink (Unless of course it
is bottled Worthington’s White Label IPA!)
·
You can use many different kinds of fruit to
make similar brews. Limoncello is made
from lemons in a similar way (use the zest and the juice, not the pith) and
works very well. Apricots are good too,
although the flavour is more delicate.
·
I’ve tried to reuse the strawberries filtered
from the jar, but find that they have little or no flavour.
·
The decanted lees, both first and second pouring,
can be saved and used when/if a cake mix calls for booze to be added!