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mulled white wine for February

There is mulled cider and mulled red wine. You may have even mulled white wine. But for the heart of Winter that is February, we like to make a batch of this Carpathian warm white wine, that isn’t as heavy as mulled.

The syrup doesn’t take long to make and will store in the fridge for a while, so you can have it a glass at a time if you’d like. There is no long cooking of the wine (just heat to warm, 120 degrees ish) so it’s still full of alcohol and crispness. And we take a batch camping, because warm, creamy wine by an outdoor fire is perfect…

This is one of my favorite drinks. I hope you enjoy it as well.

White Wine spice:

First you make a simple syrup. This is a basic technique fro many bar drinks, and it isn’t called simple because of how easy it is to make, but it could be. (don’t have the whole spices? Use what you do have)

In a 1 quart pot (about)

1 cup of water

½ cup white sugar

Boil for 7 minutes.

boiling sugar water.


Add

¼ of a cinnamon stick (about)

3 cloves

Small slice of peeled ginger root (about 2x the width of a quarter)

3 allspice berries

Peel from ½ a lemon AND ½ an orange

ingredients

Heat gently (no boil) for 5 minutes.

after 5 minutes simmering

Strain out the solids.

Add

1 tsp of vanilla

Strained, and vanilla.

That is literally all. Store it covered in the fridge for a few weeks To use, one full batch will do a 950 ml bottle of white wine. Just warm the wine with the syrup until it’s a drinkable temperature (do not boil or cook for ages) and serve. 160 ML (about 2/3 a cup) of the syrup will flavor a 750 ml bottle of wine. And about ½ a tsp will do a single glass of wine, but feel free to change that to taste.

In classic storage in the fridge, waiting wine

Granita- Italian Ices

The other day I was talking with a friend and she mentioned needing a machine to make Italian Ice (Granita).
You don’t.

You need nothing special to make a good, old fashioned Granita (which sounds so fancy and Sicilian). They were made by resourceful people with little work with. You can do it in your kitchen.

It’s hot here, and we’re still in quarantine, so I threw together a peach granita last night. I started it about 2:30, and it was ready by 7. You need a metal pan, and a fork.

I will walk you through the way I made this one, which is the way I make watermelon and kiwi granitas as well. I will also give recipes for lemon and coffee granitas, because who doesn’t want one of those? And a pro tip that will make them ‘better’.

So, I used an old metal loaf pan. A different sized pan would have different freezing times, otherwise, whatever you have works. And a metal fork.

For this one, I made peach. I drained a jar of home canned peaches and tossed them in the food processor. I was tempted to add some mint, but decided to skip it this time. I added some lemon juice, because it was a bit sweet to me. For this, I added no sugar, because they had been canned in syrup. I put it in the pan and put it in the freezer.

Pre freezing

Every 20 -30 minutes, take the fork and scrape around the edges, where ice is forming. You can see it on the sides here, at the ~40 minute mark.

Over the next few hours, I tried to scrape it down at least 2 times. if you forget and it turns solid, it’s completely salvageable- just re melt it.
The next few pictures show the progression from liquid, to slush to ice.

And that is literally it. Keep breaking it up so large ice crystals don’t form. Use any fruit you want for this. Taste it to make sure it’s what you want form the finished product, and cool off. 🙂
Note Bene: there are NO stabilizers in this. It will melt FAST.

Now, coffee (my mom’s favorite) and lemon (my favorite) are a little different, but no harder. Same technique, but with an actual ‘recipie’.

For coffee, take 2 cups of leftover coffee. (If it’s not strong, use 3 😉 ). Mix with 2 cups of water (or 1, depending on the coffee), and 3/4 cups of sugar. When the sugar is dissolved, pour it into your pan and stir every 20 minutes.

Lemon is 2 cups water, 1/2 cup lemon juice, 3/4 cups sugar. Exactly the same for the rest of it.

Making it ‘fancy’ (which will also reduce the speed it melts at) is simple. Whip 1 egg white (I use pasteurized dry egg whites, because I am paranoid. if you aren’t, you do you. ) with 3T sugar until stiff, and add it into the base when the base is almost but not quite frozen. That’s ‘Roman style’, and gets you the creamy, professional bakery-style I grew up with.

That’s it. It’s that simple. A few ingredients, a pan, a fork. And you can have authentic ices of any flavor you want all summer. I know I will.
There are a collection of Italian frozen desserts that don’t need special equipment. If you want more of them, just let me know. I doubt my family will mind testing them. 🙂

Our favorite guastelle: easy, soft Italian rolls

As I am writing this, there’s a quarantine going on (see other post for how that’s not the correct term), and a friend who knows we bake almost all our own bread asked me for some easy recipes. Here’s my first one for her.  (Hi, Laura!!!!)
Guastelle are soft, fluffy, quick Italian rolls that are a great base for other ingredients AND a great base for food. Eat them plain, as sandwhich rolls, sliced and toasted for a bruscetta style base,  as hamburger buns, etc. I have rolled these into circles and stuffed with tuna salad and cheese or hot dogs or any meat we had to make for lunches.
The only drawback is that they stale fast. They freeze well, though, and they slice up and bake into zweibeck really well.

And here’s the entire recipe, so you don’t  have to go searching and dreading a huge story when all you want is to shove warm carbs into your mouth. 🙂

Now, the following pictures were done with All Purpose flour because most people don’t have bread flour. It was fantastic. I will make them with AP again and again because they were great with it.
Yes, that’s a lot of yeast, especially in this day and age. I buy my yeast in bulk (this is where I ought to insert an affiliate like to something, but I don’t have the time for that and I want you to get this fast) so using a lot isn’t a big deal.

I used a mixer for this, because Laura has a mixer with a sough hook and I wanted this simple. Of course, a wooden spoon and kneading works great as well.

dough hook and regular beater:

That’s 2 packs of yeast (which is a little under 2 T so I just know that in my note card) and 2 cups warm water dumped into a mixing bowl or the bowl of your mixer with 1/4 cup sugar. Bread baking note: all breads are 4 ingredients- yeast, salt, water and flour. (some skip the salt, but that’s rare). Other ingredients just change the bread. But all you need are those four. The sugar in this one makes it a little sweeter, gives the yeast something easy to eat to grow faster, and gives the crust a nice brown. The sugar will also make the crust burn faster, so these need to be watched, or you can scrape the bottoms off when they come out of the oven. It’s social distancing, who’ll see?

So dump the yeast, water, sugar, 2 eggs and 1/2 cup olive oil into the mixer.  Stir.

The oil is important. If you only have corn oil, use that. Any oil you have is fine. I have used 2 onions diced and browned in 1 stick of butter to make the best rolls ever before. Do not use high quality olive oil, though- save that for dipping. The eggs add a nice richness and color to this, but they can be omitted if you are vegan or are out of eggs. Or you can use one. They are not vital. Again, yeast, water, salt nad flour are the only vital parts to any bread.

Then add 3 cups of the flour and the T of salt. I used Kosher salt, because I have that on the counter. Use whatever salt you have. If you put it in the water mix first, it will slow the yeast growth down, so dump it onto the flour, and mix. With a cloth over it! That will prevent the flour from going everywhere. Shroud that mixer! Or look like a ghost!

After that, add the other flour. A lot of bakers will weigh their flour and add an exact amount. It’s basically because the more moisture in the flour, the heavier is it.  Humans have been baking bread long before scales were around, and you can too. You want the dough to be smooth and no stick to your hands.

For some reason, it sticks to Hex’s hands and not mine, I guess his are more dry?

After it’s mixed in, you want to switch to the dough hook/ knead on a table.


Add more flour if you need to to get it to a ‘puppy’s belly’ feel. let the machine knead it for just a minute or two- it doesn’t need a lot. By hand, when it stops sticking to everything and again, has that belly feel to it. It will ride up the collar of the hook, just push it down.

Then ‘make the rolls about half the size you want’. Hex was not happy with that instruction. I take an egg sized piece of dough and roll/pinch it until it’s a roll, dip the bottom in flour, and place on a sheet. I also pat it down, because these rolls rise up and not out.

These rise very quickly. The first ones will have already loosened up when you are putting the last ones on. I got two sheets.
Start of rising:

ready

in oven having baked for 8 minutes. At this point, I take them out, turn them 360 degrees, and switch the top and bottom ones. This gives them all a better heat distribution. Maybe a convection would be enough, but I dunno…

This was the 16 minute mark. Gorgeous!

4 of them on a plate when cool. Made 22 of them.

Froze half of the right off the bat. will be using them with soup tomorrow for dinner. Supposed to be 40 degrees.
Have fun!