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Cheap
Eats:
Café Brulot
Coffee Liqueur
by Cynthia Clampitt
What's the madder? The madder family of plants, Rubiaceae
in Latin, includes among its more than 6,500 species of tropical herbs, shrubs,
and trees such fragrant delights as the gardenia, such medical wonders as
quinine, and such necessities of modern life as coffee. The coffee shrub is an
evergreen. In the wild, it grows to heights of 26 to 33 feet. It produces
bunches of white flowers that smell much like jasmine, which in time produce a
fruit. The fruit, when ripe, is called a cherry, and its fleshy pulp contains
two seeds, what we know as coffee beans.
The word coffee may have evolved from the Arabic qahwah, by way of
the Turkish kahveh, but some etymologists link it
with the Kaffa province in southwest Ethiopia, reputed birthplace of the genus.
The first domesticated species was Coffea
arabica. The varieties of this species produce the finest, smoothest, most
highly regarded coffees. Though they grow in the tropics,
arabicas tend to like higher altitudes and cooler weather. Hence,
any time you hear something being described as "mountain grown," it will be
an arabica.
Coffea robusta originated (or was developed) in East
Africa. C. robusta varieties are
stronger and more resistant to disease than C.
arabica. They also yield more fruit, and are adapted to warm, humid
climates to which arabica coffee is
not suited. While the robusta coffees
are more neutral in taste, less aromatic, and somewhat more acidic than arabicas, they are more easily grown and
harvested, don't spoil as quickly, and are therefore less costly. They also
have more caffeine. (And this not spoiling quickly applies after harvesting and
roasting, as well. So if you buy a can of coffee and keep it for two years in a
cupboard, the robusta will be less
changed over time; arabica coffee
should be refrigerated, and should be purchased in smaller amounts, so you use
it within a few weeks, or if you grind your own, within a month or so. It won't
be rotten, it just loses much of the aroma and flavor for which you paid.)
There are
numerous myths and fables about who, in Ethiopia, first discovered that the
fruit of the coffee plant was consumable, but the truth is lost in the mists of
time. However, it appears that Coffea
arabica had been domesticated by as early as the sixth century. The first
written references are Arabic, and, as the name indicates, it is the Arabs who
took the first real interest in cultivating and utilizing coffee. It appears
that, at first, the berries were chewed, pulp, seeds, and all. Later, the fruit
was boiled whole to create a beverage. It was not until the 13th century that
the beans were separated from the pulp and roasted before infusing into what we
now recognize as coffee.
Coffee became
the wine of the Muslim world, because real wine is forbidden. In fact, the
Arabic word for coffee, qahwah,
originally meant wine. The stimulating beverage first gained popularity among
the Muslim sect known as dervishes, who could whirl that much longer thanks to
the caffeine. Coffee drinking reached Aden in the middle of the 15th century,
then traveled to Mecca, Cairo, Damascus, Aleppo, and on into Constantinople.
The world's first coffee house was established in Constantinople in 1554.
It was a few
more decades before European travelers to the Middle East began bringing back
more than just stories of the black drink that helped prevent drowsiness. When
it first arrived in England, it was sold more as a medicine than a refreshment,
with claims that it prevented everything from eye-sores to gout, scurvy, and
consumption. But it was not until a Jewish merchant from Turkey opened a coffee
house in Oxford in 1650 that coffee culture really caught hold in Europe.
France was next, then Vienna, and soon it was all over Europe.
The people of
the Middle East long maintained control over the coffee trade. For fifty years,
English and Dutch buyers had to go to Mocha to trade for the beans. But then,
in 1720, the Dutch discovered that coffee would grow in their territories on
Java in the East Indies. (So now you know where coffee got two of its more
common sobriquets.) By the mid-1700s, coffee had pretty much spread to tropical
areas around the world.
While there are
few things more satisfying than a plain, honest cup of good coffee, the
beverage is versatile, and can be dressed up for special occasions. Café Brulot
is a lovely way to top off a really nice dinner. I like serving it in Irish
coffee glasses, simply because it signals that this isn't just an ordinary cup
of joe. It's okay to add cream, but you may want to suggest that your guests
taste it first, because they won't want to "doctor" it as if it were plain
coffee.
The first time I
prepared it for a dinner party, the highlight of my day was succeeding in
peeling both the orange and the lemon in unbroken, spiraling strips.
Fortunately, having it come off in pieces doesn't affect the taste of the final
product, and unless you drag your guests into the kitchen to see it (which I
did), no one will ever know what condition the peel is in.
As for the
coffee liqueur, it is not only fun to make for one's own consumption, it's also
dandy for gift giving. You can buy nice bottles or just save empties from other
beverages. It's much cheaper than commercial liqueurs, and home-made always
conveys a more personal touch. Note that, while the café brulot can be made the
same evening you need it, the liqueur requires 10 days to age.
Café Brulot
8 cups strong coffee
3 or 4 cinnamon sticks
peel of 1 lemon
peel of 1 orange
3 tsp. brown sugar
1 cup brandy
Add cinnamon
sticks and peels to coffee and simmer 10 minutes. Dissolve sugar in brandy and
pour into simmered coffee immediately before serving.
Coffee Liqueur
1 fifth 100-proof vodka
2 ounces instant coffee (regular or decaf)
4 cups sugar
1 vanilla bean
water
In a large pot,
dissolve sugar in 3 cups boiling water.
Dissolve coffee
in 1 cup boiling water. Add to dissolved sugar.
Add vodka to
mixture in pot. Split vanilla bean lengthwise, add to pot, and stir. Let stand
at room temperature for 10 days. Remove vanilla bean and bottle your liqueur.
Notes: The vanilla bean can be used more than once, though three
times would probably be the maximum.
Using vodka
produces a liqueur that is reminiscent of Kahlua. Substitute rum to make it
more like Tia Maria. And there is no reason you couldn't experiment a
little--for example, adding a cinnamon stick or using a flavored coffee. Just
make sure you don't fool too much with the amount of sugar and alcohol, because
that's what keeps it from growing mold while the liqueur is aging.
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