Fun with Vodka!

vDSC_0620

If you can’t have fun with vodka, you’re just not drinking enough!

Naw…  silliness aside, I had a couple fun recipes that I wanted to try with some cheap vodka, some strawberries and some vanilla beans!  So I finally got everything together and decided to give it a whirl!

vDSC_0624

Just as a disclaimer, I’m really not much of a drinker.  I love brewing beer and making wine was fun too, and there’s just nothing better than a good cold home brew with a plate of BBQ pork or oh, even better a nice big cheese burger off the grill!  And every so often I love a nice frozen margaurita!

I still have about 10 of my beers left from LAST years brewing!!!  I guess I just need some more drinking buddies to help feed my brewing fun.

But this always interested me.  Making your own fruit cordial.  Cordials remind me of sweet little old ladies sitting on their porch in their Sunday best, with a teeny little sweet cordial drink to make the afternoon just mellow.  And of course, with little dainty tea cakes and cucumber sandwiches cut in little triangles.  A sweet little liquor that you can drizzle over a bit of vanilla ice cream for a nice grown up desert.

And while reading a book on brewing, I learned that a very simple cordial can be made with just three ingredients.  Cheap vodka, fresh fruit and some sugar.  Oh yes, and time.

My recipe was to fill a quart mason jar with half fruit.  Cut and mashed a bit.  Add one cup of sugar.  And then fill to the brim with vodka.

Pretty darn easy.  Even kids could make it!  Ahem.  Well, maybe as a gift for grandma!!!!  Yeah!!!

Actually, it was fun to shake it up and see the vodka start to turn a lovely red.  I’d like to make one with fresh peaches, too, but darn, I ran out of vodka!  Hmmmm….

vDSC_0625 vDSC_0626

Another fun thing to do is to make your own vanilla extract!  Why pay good money for an ounce of the stuff, when for about $15 dollars you can make a whole quart of the heavenly scented infusion?

I bought a package of Madagascar premium vanilla beans on eBay for $9.99, free shipping!  I believe there was 20 in the package.  Perhaps 25.

I simply cut them in half, and slit each bean down the middle to expose the seeds and inner part.  Then just toss in that quart Mason jar and fill with vodka!  And again, for some reason, the cheaper the better.

Set both concoctions in a cool, dark place, like a cupboard in your pantry.  Shake every time you think about it, or see them there.  Maybe once a day.

The cordial will be tolerable in a week or two, much nicer in a month, and simply sublime in half a year.  The vanilla extract really needs a good two months to properly infuse.  But six months will give you the most exquisite extract you’ve every had!

I did add more vodka to my vanilla a few days later…  just for reference, a small bottle of vodka is not quite a half gallon!

I can’t wait to see how it all turns out.  They look pretty darn good after about a week or so, already.  This picture below was the same day I started them!

vDSC_0632

If it works out nicely, I’d like to try and make a few more infusions…  like a peach and maybe a fresh mint from the garden!  That would be delightful!  I just think it’s neat to make these things that you have to wait for.  Like beer, or wine, or cheese.  At first, you think, oh, that’s just too long, can’t wait for something like that… but after you start a few of these things, time flies and before you know it, you are ready to sample that creation!   I have my first wheel of cheese working…  just another week before we can give it a taste!!!  Can’t wait!!!

 

 

Pin It

Calling the Stone Fairy!!!!

gravel path

Hard to believe but that is 500 pounds of stone.  Maggie and I laid it in the muddiest place… from the tube gate and sheep shack back to the big barn.  I guess we need another 500 pounds to make it all the way.  It’s already helping a ton…  haha.  I just made a rock funny.  I didn’t even mean to!  It just happened.  Honest.

Now if a BIG old dump truck full of stone just happened to oh, tip over in my driveway…  and of course, no one got hurt and they were fully insured…  and only like missed their lunch and we were able to make up some nice grilled cheese sammies for them for the misfortunate situation they were in… that would be okay with me.

But in the meanwhile, I guess we’ll do it one Blue load at a time!  That poor gal.  We luvs her.

 

 

Pin It

Sorting out the Fleeces…

DSC_0805

This is ONE full sheep fleece!  It’s huge!  I think this one is Angus’s fleece.  It will wash out to a light white in color… almost a cream.

DSC_0807

Look at the lovely crimp in the fiber!  That is so nice… it’s to DIE for in the fiber world, apparently!  Most of my sheep are the more traditional Shetland, not the primitive, dual coated sheep.  DSC_0809

Here’s another pretty little sample!  Most of the locks are over 4 inches long, some longer.  They were sheared a little earilier than last year, so they really had about 10 months of growth instead of 12.  Now that we are in the Emily route, next year they should have a little more time to grow some even more super lovely stuff!!!

DSC_0810

Luna Kitty just LOVES fleece.  I think she would just crawl into the fiber bags and never come out until it’s like 80 degrees out.  We are so going to make some cat and dog toys in the near future stuffed with lovely sheep wool…  animals ADORE the “wild” aroma of the fleece…

DSC_0813

More beautiful fiber!!!!  This is from Ivy!  She grows a lovely nice coat.  Beautiful crimp!!

DSC_0815

Evee loves the fiber as well.  She is a sheepdog after all, so I guess that only makes sense!  haha….    she is playing with the skirted yucky poopy stuff!  Which to a dog is the BEST!  Evee doesn’t really care much about crimp or fiber length!  :-)

 

DSC_0820

Baa baa, black sheep…  have you any wool?  Yes, sir, yes sir, 6 bags full!

We still have some fleeces and wool left…

 

http://www.chekal.com/farm/wh-store-wool.htm

 

 

 

Related Posts with ThumbnailsPin It