vodka

apricot liquor

by Stevie on September 14, 2011

apricot liquor

apricot liquor

This is the second recipe that I’ve ever tried from the great magazine, La Cucina Italiana. It came in the August 2011 edition as part of a round-up of apricot recipes. I love fruit-infused after-dinner liquors but have never tried to make my own. This one, at least, was really pretty straightforward. Unlike their limoncello recipe in an earlier section of the same volume, where you have to carefully remove the lemon rind while leaving as much of the pith behind (difficult!) as possible, here all that’s required is that you rinse and pit the fruit.

I doubled the recipe and have been giving small jars of this luscious drink to friends at work. The vanilla bean gives the apricots a powerfully rich flavor. I’m almost fooled into thinking that the drink was aged in new French oak barrels, like wine. This is strong, probably about 40 proof, so a little goes a long way.

apricot liquor

4½ cups 80-proof vodka
2 lbs fresh ripe apricots, pits removed and roughly chopped
1 vanilla bean
2 cups sugar
1 cups water

Pour vodka into a large bowl. Add vanilla bean and apricots. Cover and let sit at room temperature for up to three days. Strain through cheesecloth. Rinse vanilla bean and let dry, for reuse.

In a medium saucepan, heat sugar and water together until completely dissolved into a simple syrup. Remove from heat and let cool. Once at room temperature, mix with infused vodka. Pour liquor into glass jars or bottles. I used the original vodka bottle and for the extra, some small jars for canning. Let rest in the refrigerator for about two weeks. Serve chilled. Enjoy!

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Jasmine showing off the empty bottle of Hangar 1 vodka in our new dining room!

Jasmine showing off the empty bottle of Hangar 1 vodka in our new dining room!

Jasmine’s gone back to school lately. Good for her but too bad for the weirdcombos world as all of this added homework gives her less time for blogging! Just because she’s busy doesn’t mean that she doesn’t have time for a good time with food and drink. Prof. T’s away on business in Japan this week so we had Jasmine over to admire our newly painted living and dining rooms (What a nightmare! But now that it’s done, I think that it was totally worth it!) This gave her a break from all of her studies and gave us time to catch up, and show off a little, too ;) .

I’ve made this penne alla vodka recipe many times. It’s originally from the New Joy of Cooking. Before I learned to make it, I always thought that it was wonderfully complex and probably too hard to prepare at home. In fact, the Joy says that it’s “elegant enough to begin a formal dinner.” Though maybe that’s an anti-Italian bias in the Joy, come to think of it? What’s wrong with other pasta dishes at formal dinners, anyway?!? I love serving Roman tomato pasta my way or Pesto American Style for parties. Well, whatever!

The classic recipe calls for heavy cream instead of soy milk. And really, any vodka will work. I’ve dropped the cream due to my cholesterol issue, now resolved with diet and weight control. If you don’t have that problem or are planning on serving the dish to company, perhaps at an elegant formal dinner party, you might try it as an alternative. We used Hangar 1, a popular, high-quality, Bay Area-produced vodka, because that’s what Jasmine had at home. Now that’s what I call ‘thinking globally and eating locally!’ I’ve stopped stocking up vodka as I just keep drinking it! Good thing that J doesn’t have that problem…

fresh Italian basil is critical to bring out the delicate flavors of this dish

fresh Italian basil is critical to bring out the delicate flavors of this dish

Penne with Hangar 1 Vodka Sauce

3 tbsp. olive oil
1 large onion, diced
¼ cup Hangar 1 vodka or similar
28oz can crushed tomatoes
salt to taste
black pepper to taste
crushed red pepper to taste (about 1/8 tsp.)
½ cup soy milk
3 tbsp. Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, grated
1 small bunch fresh Italian basil, shredded
1 pkg. Penne cooked per directions on label

Heat olive oil in deep pan. Add onion and saute on medium until translucent (about five minutes). Add vodka and allow alcohol to boil off. You’ll smell this happening. Add tomato, salt and black and red peppers. Simmer for about five to ten minutes. Remove from heat. Using a stick blender (this is messy so wear an apron!) blend so that sauce becomes smooth without any tomato or onion chunks. Return to heat. Add soy milk. Cook for about five more minutes to warm completely. Just before serving, add basil, cheese and cooked penne. Toss together. Serve family style in a large bowl or plate individually. I like to sprinkle a bit more Parmigiano Reggiano on top and add a dash of finishing olive oil and a twist or two from the pepper mill. This is great with red wine or, of course, a vodka cocktail!

close up of finished penne alla Hangar 1

close up of finished penne alla Hangar 1

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