Category: Beverages

  • Sirop Simple, Simple Syrup

    Recipe for making simple sugar syrup sirop simple, at home.

    Simple syrup, or sugar syrup, is a basic sweetener in beverages. For regular simple sugar syrup, combine equal parts sugar and water. For a ‘rich’ simple syrup, combine two parts sugar to one part water in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil and simmer for 2-3 minutes until the solids have dissolved. Let cool to room temperature and transfer to a squeeze bottle or other sealed container. Keeps, refrigerated, for at least a week.

    For more flavorful cocktail syrups, try using Demerara,/em> Turbinado, or Muscovado sugar.

    This syrup is used in recipes for Punch Latier (Escoffier, 908), and Bavaroise (Escoffier, 4995).

    Ingredients
    227g (1 cup) granulated white sugar
    227g (1 cup) water

    Equipment
    Salter digital scale
    Measuring cup
    Medium saucepan
    Wire whisk
    Small funnel
    Sealed container or squeeze bottle

    Total time: Prep: 1 minute, Cook: 3 minutes

    Yields: 16 oz simple syrup.

  • 4995. Bavaroise, Rum Bavaroise, Bavarian Tea

    4995. Bavaroise, Rum Bavaroise, Bavarian Tea

     

    Escoffier recipe for making Bavaroise, or Bavarian tea, at home (Escoffier 4995).

    Bavaroise, is a milk tea (or coffee) with rum or kirsch, served hot. Originally sweetened with maidenhair fern syrup, and later, with simple syrup. It can be additionally flavored with vanilla, orange or lemon.

    History of Bavaroise

    “The Bavaroise only goes back to the first years of [the 18th century]; and it is owed to princes of Bavaria, when they came to France. During the stay which their Highnesses spent in the Capital, they often went to take tea at M. Procope’s. But they asked that it be served them in crystal carafes. Instead of sugar, they had maidenhair syrup put in. The new drink was called bavaroise, from the name of the princes. It was adopted in the cafés, with no other change than to sometimes put in it some milk. Meanwhile, as it was later noticed that the maidenhair took away the flavor and the agreeable odor of the tea, the café owners substituted sugar clarified and cooked to a syrup.”

    Histoire de la vie privée des François, 1782.

    Earl Grey tea leaves

    For the Tea

    Brew a pot of strong tea. I used Earl Grey, a black tea flavored with the oil of the bergamot orange. We’ll need a total of two cups of boiling hot tea for this recipe.

    Earl Grey Tea

    For the Infused Milk

    For orange-infused milk, use the peel of one orange. For lemon-infused milk, use the peel of one or two lemons. For vanilla-infused milk, take one whole vanilla pod, slice it down its length and scrape out the seeds. Put all the seeds and the pod in the milk. Or use a teaspoon or two of vanilla extract, to taste. You can also use chocolate or cocoa powder for a chocolate bavaroise. Mmmmm…

    bavaroise mise for infused milk

    In a small pot, add the peel or vanilla to two cups whole milk, and bring to a boil. Remove from heat, cover and let steep for at least 15 minutes. If using chocolate, add the cocoa and bring to a boil to dissolve all the solids. Then it’s ready to use…

    bavaroise infuse milk with orange

    For the Egg Batter

    In a small stainless steel bowl, mix together 4 eggs with the sugar.

    bavaroise - mix together eggs and sugar

    Place over a small point of simmering water and whisk continually until the eggs lighten to a pale straw color and thicken to a “ribbon stage.”

    bavaroise - double boiler

    That’s when it doesn’t quite drip, but slowly flows from your whisk in a ribbon. It’s important to keep the heat low enough so you don’t scramble the eggs, but high enough to dissolve the sugar and thicken the batter.

    bavaroise whipped sugar and egg

    Once you get the hang of it, the same technique is used for making fresh hollandaise sauce and sabayon.

    Assembly

    Once the eggs are thickened, briskly whisk in the Sirop Capillaire, two cups hot tea, two cups hot infused milk, and alcohol, until frothy.

    bavaroise - mixed frothy

    Serve immediately in teacups, mugs or glassware of your choice. You don’t have to, but you could top with chantilly cream.

    Escoffier recipe 4995 Bavaroise

    Cheers, and Happy Holidays!

    Ingredients
    4 egg yolks
    125g (4.5 oz) sugar
    100g (3 oz) maidenhair fern syrup or simple syrup
    425g (2 cups) hot tea of your choice
    500g (2 cups) whole milk
    Peel of 1 orange or lemon
    210g (1 cup) rum or kirsch

    Yields about 12 servings.

    From the Books:

    4995 Bavaroise

    Whisk together 250g (9 oz) caster sugar and 8 egg yolks until the mixture becomes a pale straw colour and reaches the ribbon stage.

    Add in sequence, 1 dl (3 1/2 fl oz or 1/2 U.S. cup) Capillaire syrup and 5 dl (18 fl oz or 2 1/4 U.S. cups) each of boiling hot freshly made tea and boiling milk, whisking vigorously so that the whole becomes very frothy. Lastly, add 2 dl (7 fl oz or 7/8 U.S. cup) liqueur, either Kirsch or Rum, which will give its name to the Bavaroise.

    If a vanilla, orange or lemon Bavaroise is required, infuse the flavouring in the milk 15 minutes beforehand. If a chocolate one is required melt 180g (6 oz) of chocolate and add it to the milk together with a little vanilla. If a coffee Bavaroise is required infuse 100g (3 1/2 oz) freshly ground coffee in the milk, or flavour with 5 dl (18 fl oz or 2 1/4 U.S. cups) freshly made coffee.

    Bavaroise is served in special glasses and it must be served whilst still frothy.

    Le guide culinaire: the complete guide to modern cookery, 1921.


    Prop. pour 10 verres: 200 grammes de sucre travaillé avec 8 jaunes, jusqu’à ce que l’appareil fasse nettement le ruban. Ajouter: 1 décilitre de sirop de capillaire, 5 décilitres de thé fraîchement fait, 5 décilitres de lait bouillant, et 2 décilitres de la liqueur adoptée. Tous ces liquides ajoutés à l’appareil, l’un après l’autre, en froulant vigoureusement avec un fouet pour le faire mousser, et la liqueur, quelle qu’elle soit, mise en dernier lieu. Dresser en verres spéciaux, et à l’état de mousse.

    — Le guide culinaire, 1903.

  • Sirop Capillaire, Maidenhair Fern Syrup

    Sirop Capillaire, Maidenhair Fern Syrup

    Recipe for making maidenhair fern (capillaire) syrup, sirop capillaire, at home.

    Sirop Capillaire is an infusion of maidenhair fern syrup and orange-flower water, used for flavoring cocktails. As Escoffier did not include a recipe in Guide Culinaire, this is based on others, notably those of Jerry Thomas.

    True capillaire syrup was initially made in the 1700s with maidenhair fern. But over the years, some thought the flavor detracted from their beverages and eventually settled on a sugar syrup simply flavored with orange (curaçao or orange-flower water).

    This syrup is used in the recipe for Bavaroise (Escoffier, 4995).

    Mise en place for sirop capillaire.
    Mise en place for Sirop Capillaire

    Start with 28 grams of fresh maidenhair fern leaves, adiantum pedatum (add-ee-ANN-tum puh-DAY-tum), rinsed well in cold water. Use organic or culinary-grade if you can find it. The last thing you want to ingest is a delicious, but pesticide-laced, cocktail… Place in a large bowl.

    Maidenhair fern leaves

    Combine 1000g water with 500g granulated sugar and bring to a boil until the solids are dissolved.

    Boiling water and sugar

    Clarified syrups

    Pre-20th century recipes call for loaf-sugar, then clarifying with egg whites. This was to bring out any impurities from the unrefined sugar. With today’s bleached and refined granulated sugars, the clarification step is un-needed. Unless your syrup turns out cloudy.Then you could clarify with egg-whites if you really wanted. Stir in a couple of egg whites, boil, then skim the scum off the top. Strain.

    Pour the syrup over the fern leaves and infuse until the syrup cools to room temperature. Strain. Then add 10g (or to taste) of orange-flower water.

    Infuse the syrup with capillaire

    Strain again through a funnel into a 750mL glass bottle. (I save my Champagne bottles expressly for syrups!) Cap and refrigerate for future use.

    Sirop Capillaire, Maidenhair Fern Syrup

    Ingredients
    1000g water
    500g granulated sugar
    28g fresh maidenhair fern leaves
    10g orange-flower water

    From the Books

    346. Sirop Capillaire. (Maidenhair Syrup.)

    1 lb. of maidenhair herb.
    5 1/2 gallons of boiling water.

    Macerate till cold; strain without pressing, so as to get 5 gallons; take the whites of 3 eggs beaten to froth, and mix them with the infusion; keep back a quart of the liquid; then dissolve and boil in the above 80 lbs. of sugar by a good heat; when the scum rises, put in a little from the quart of cold liquid, and this will make the scum settle; let it raise and settle 3 times; then skim, and when perfectly clear add 1/2 a pint of orange-flower water; then boil once up again and strain.

    “This beverage ought always to be made with boiling water, and allowed to concoct and cool for a day or two before it is put on the table. In this way, the materials get more intensely amalgamated than cold water and cold whiskey ever get.”

    65. Capillaire. — Put a wine-glass of Curaçoa into a pint of clarified syrup, shake them well together, and pour it into the proper sized bottles. A tea-spoonful in a glass of fair water makes a pleasant eau sucré

    66. Another recipe for making Capillaire. — To one gallon of water add twenty-eight pounds of loaf-sugar; put both over the fire to simmer; when milk-warm add the whites of four or five eggs, well beaten; as these simmer with the syrup, skim it well; then pour it off, and flavor it with orange flower water or bitter almonds, whichever you prefer.

    – Thomas. How to mix drinks, 1865

    maidenhair ferns

    Sources:
    Le Grand d’Aussy. Histoire de la vie privée des François, 1782.
    Jerry Thomas. How to mix drinks, 1865.