Beverage and Liqueur Recipes
44 (Homemade Orange Liqueur)
Posted by LladyRusty at recipegoldmine.com 11/8/2001, 6:07 pm
Source: Patricia Wells at Home in Provence - oregonlive.com
Makes 1 quart
Note: Orange liqueur, or "44," is one of the most traditional
European homemade aperitifs. You'll find versions in Spain,
Italy and France - some made with cloves and cinnamon; some
with a mix of oranges, bitter oranges and lemons; some flavored
with coffee beans; and those sweetened with honey. The original
recipe given to me called for a single orange studded with 44
coffee beans, mixed with 44 sugar cubes and a bottle of clear
eau de vie. The mixture is then set aside for 44 days. The result
is a fragrant, fruity drink that can be mixed with a bit of
white wine as an aperitif or served as is with dessert or as
an after-meal liqueur. I found the original version too sweet
for my taste, so have cut the amount of sugar in half.
1 large orange
44 coffee beans
22 sugar cubes (or 6 tablespoons granulated sugar)
1 quart clear eau de vie or vodka.
Thoroughly scrub and dry the orange. With the end of a sharp
knife, pierce the orange all over. Insert the 44 coffee beans
into the skin, embedding each bean into the orange. Place the
orange in a 1 1/2-quart canning jar. Add the sugar cubes and
the eau de vie. Cover securely. Turn the jar upside down and
shake to help dissolve the sugar. Place in a cool, dry, dark
spot. Shake the jar daily until the sugar is completely dissolved.
Set aside for 44 days. During this time, the liquid will turn
from clear to a pale orange and will take on a lovely coffee-orange
fragrance. The 44 can be stored indefinitely as is, or the liquid
can be filtered and transferred to an attractive liqueur bottle.
The orange and coffee beans are not consumed and should be discarded
once they lose their vigor.
Serve 44 chilled or at room temperature, added to white wine,
or in tiny liqueur glasses as an accompaniment to fruit desserts
or as an after-dinner drink.
Variation:
In Provence, many cooks prepare their orange liqueur by piercing
the orange with cloves, tying the fruit with string, then suspending
it in a clear glass jar partially filled with clear eau de vie.
(The orange should never touch the alcohol.) The jar is sealed,
and the aromatic oils of the orange infuse the alcohol with
their fruity essence, turning the eau de vie a pale, glistening
orange. After about one month, the orange is discarded, and
the aperitif is sweetened to taste and transferred to a sealed
bottle.
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