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Showing posts with label gin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gin. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 September 2015

Ted and the Damson in distress



… a friend who shall remain nameless (Gill) gave me a gin making kit for my birthday. You know the kind … the one where you add gin. It came with all the vessels and utensils to make damson (or its cousin) sloe gin, plus a fool proof recipe (?) ... and now the damson season has finally arrived.

The jury is out on the origins of damson plums. Some say they were first cultivated in the ancient city of Damascus, now the capital of modern day Syria and hence the name. Others say it can’t be the same plum as those plums are recorded as being sweet, whereas today’s damsons are very astringent and thus tart. They do agree that like many plants they came to the UK in a Roman army chuck wagon and being a hardy little tree they can thrive almost anywhere. They were even taken to America by the British colonists where in Idaho they “escaped” and can be found growing in the wild, as they do here in the UK. 

They are a common plant in hedgerows here and so you see lots of people loitering around said hedgerows with bowls giving passing motorists furtive looks that say “move on nothing to see here, get away from my damson treasures". 

Unlike most plums damsons cannot be preserved by drying and so nowadays those who know what to do with these ancient little gems usually make jams and jellies, fruit paste (damson cheese) chutney and add them to puddings and ice cream.  Best of all – steeped in sugar and alcohol to make damson gin or vodka.  So here’s where my kit and fool proof recipe come in. 

First procure some fresh fruit (I got organic ones) wash and dry them – tick. Buy a pack of granulated sugar (forgetting that you have some in the cupboard already) – tick. Procure a litre of ordinary gin – tick.



Now before we go any further I must warn you that there is violence involved in this recipe … take a pin or a needle and torture the damsons by pricking them all over to break their skin.  The squeamish amongst you can pop them in the freezer until their skins crack as an alternative.

Bung them in your large clean jar, cover with sugar, add the gin, and seal. Give them a swirl each day until the sugar is dissolved and then put away in a dark place for at least 3 months to mature, tasting occasionally for balance (the gin, not yours) … voilĂ  ... ready for Christmas – tick.

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

G&T?


The Beefeater gin distillery has been producing gin sin the late 1800's, they are shortly going to open their doors and allow visitors inside.  Maybe you will be offered a wee tasting?  

Thursday, 17 September 2009

Stirred not Shaken

On the balcony of Somerset house overlooking the Thames is the Bombay Sapphire Dusk bar. Designed by the renown Tom Dixon.
Here you can sip your perfect martini, I'll have mine stirred not shaken thanks (despite what James Bond prefers).
Do you put vermouth in yours? I like a hint. Many don't like any. I've heard of waving the bottle near the glass without removing the cap.
Winston Churchill made his martini by adding gin then bowing towards France for the vermouth.

Cool place , but only open until 18 October. Get yourself over for a bit of cocktail imbibing.

Don't forget my competition that is running at present to win yourself a pair of tickets to Brussels. You can enter as many times as you like.

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Water Mill

Water mills and wind mills are hardly what springs to mind when you think of London are they? Well certainly not to me. However thanks to Diamond Geezer who has a link to odd events on each weekend, I learnt that last weekend was national mills open day. Although I made a list and planned to see several, thanks to TFL (transport of London) getting around London was nigh on a miracle last weekend. However I did manage to get to House Mill in Bromley-by-Bow, just a 20 minute trip on the district line.
A rather impressive mill built in 1776, partly restored, in desperate need of more funds to continue the fabulous restoration so any millionaires reading this, £500,000 would just about do it.
In medieval times the mill produced flour for local bakers. It later made gunpowder, but its most successful product was gin. The water of London was not drinkable (I'm not convinced this has changed), however back in the 1700's ale or gin were the chosen liquids. (again not sure this has changed much either).
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