australia:mulled_wine
Table of Contents
how to make mulled wine (glühwein)
see also:
- other drinks:
- hot toddy
- Moscow mule
- Chai Eggnog
Introduction
- warm spicy mulled wine is a perennial favorite for those cold winter nights and is great for sharing amongst a group
- the process of making it whilst camping adds to the pleasurable experience but you will need a 1.5L medium sized lidded pot and a range of ingredients and a cooker with enough fuel such as a wood stove or a larger gas bottle BBQ stove (hiking stoves are probably not going to cut it as it will use a bit of gas).
- mulling is the process of adding fruits, spices and sugar to a hot drink
- if camping with large groups you may wish to triple the size of this and thus a 3.5-5L pot will be needed plus a ladle
Recipes
- each batch below gives 5 serves
- whole spices, rather than ground, are key to nice mulled wine (and can also be used for spiced ginger tea or hot toddies)
- go easy on the spices - they can be over-powering!
usual ingredients
- 1 750mL bottle red wine
- mid-range ($10-20), medium to full-bodied red, like Zinfandel, Merlot, Grenache or Shiraz
- do not waste money on expensive wines as you will camouflage it with all the mulling
- look for wine described as “jammy” or with “notes of vanilla.”
- avoid red wines that are high in tannins or very oaky in flavor, like Cabernet Sauvignon
- avoid very light red wines, like Pinot Noir, because they don’t offer enough body to carry the spices
- 80-100mL brandy (but can use spiced rum, whisky, Cointreau, Amaretto, or even tawny port instead)
- ½ stick of cinnamon
- 6 cloves
- 2 pods of star anise
- 2 cardamom pods
- ½ orange (sliced)
- optionally, peel first to reduce bitterness
- optionally also squeeze some juice in
- optionally add ½ lemon (sliced)
- 15 to 100mL honey or maple syrup according to taste (or sugar)
- optionally, add 10g (or 5 tea bags) rooibos tea
usual optional garnishes
- 1 citrus slice (orange, lemon or lime)
- extra cinnamon stick
- extra star anise
- fresh nutmeg (microplaned)
cooking
- add all ingredients into a medium pot eg. heavy bottomed Dutch oven or stainless steel pot
- put the lid on and heat on low stirring periodically
- warm the mixture over medium heat until steaming (about 5 minutes), and keep an eye on it.
- when you start seeing the tiniest of bubbles at the surface, reduce the heat to the lowest of low
- ideally you don't want the temperature to go ever 70degC otherwise you will evaporate the alcohol
- simmer for 30 minutes to up to 3 hours
- heat it too long or too high, and eventually your wine will taste too spicy, syrupy and almost raisin-like, and the alcohol will evaporate over time
- use a fine mesh strainer and strain into large pre-warmed jug (discard the citrus and spices)
- optionally, place all spices and citrus in a cheese cloth to avoid the need to strain it
- or just ladle it out taking care to avoid the spices
- pour into pre-warmed glass coffee cups or similar
- garnish with an orange peel and a grating of fresh nutmeg
other variations
- dry white wine instead of red wine
- 1-2 caffeine free chai tea bag instead of the cloves and star anise
- also consider trying ginger slices, nutmeg, or allspice
- sprinkle some fresh cranberries in the pot a few minutes before serving as an alternate garnish
consider snacks to have with it
- nuts
- maple popcorn
- etc
australia/mulled_wine.txt · Last modified: 2023/06/02 17:50 by gary1