Skip to main content

Drinks to Warm You Up: Wassail and the Tradition of Toasting #OurFamilyTable

Today, Ellen of Family Around the Table and Christie of A Kitchen Hoor's Adventures invited us to join them in sharing drinks to warm you up. They wrote: "Winter is in full swing and it's time to warm up with a beverage. Think hot chocolate, hot toddy, warm cider, cappuccino and more for this event." It sounded perfect after a couple of chilly weeks in Denmark for the holidays!


Drinks to Warm You Up

Tradition of Toasting
When I began researching wassail, because I had read about it in different British literature for years, I found it actually started as a toast or a greeting. Waes hael! people would say while lifting up a mug of spiced cider. And there was traditionally a piece of toasted bread that floated on top of the cider. Hence the sayings: "I'll toast to that!" or "Let's have a toast!"

But, probably, my favorite of the wassail traditions that I found was the ritual of offering the spiced cider to the trees.  In the winter, wassailers would prepare traditional wassail, soaking pieces of toast in it, and travel from apple orchard to orchard in effort to ensure a good harvest for the coming year.  They might even hang wassail-soaked pieces of toast in the branches or bury them at the roots to keep the tree spirits well-fed until the next year.

Wassail  
            
I probably could have looked for a British hard cider, but I opted for a local-to-me brand: Tanuki, out of Santa Cruz.

Ingredients

  • 4 small apples (I used a locally grown variety called Strawberry Parfait, they are only about 2" diameter)
  • ¼ C organic granulated sugar
  • 1 organic medium orange (I used a blood orange)
  • 13 whole cloves
  • 8 C hard apple cider
  • ½ C brandy
  • 1 T powdered ginger
  • 1 t freshly grated nutmeg
  • 6 allspice berries
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 6 large eggs, separated
  • toast, optional (I used leftover brioche)


Procedure
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Scoop out the core of the apples, leaving the bottom intact if you can. Fill each apple with 1 T of sugar and place them on a parchment or silicon mat-lined baking sheet. Pierce the orange with the cloves and place it on the same baking sheet. Put the tray in the oven and bake for 35 to 40 minutes.

In the meantime, wrap the allspice and cinnamon in a piece of cheesecloth and set aside. Pour the apple cider and brandy into a heavy-bottomed stock pot and warm over low heat. Whisk in the ginger and grated nutmeg and float the packet of spices in the wassail as it warms. Take care not to let the wassail boil. 

In a medium mixing bowl, beat egg yolks until lightened in color. In a separate bowl, whip egg whites until stiff peaks form. Fold yolks into whites, then temper the eggs by slowly pouring a ladle-full of warm wassail into the eggs.

Remove the spice sachet from the wassail and pour in the tempered eggs. Transfer to a punch bowl. Float baked apples and the orange in the wassail and serve by the mug. If you wish, top each mugful with a small slice of toast. Waes hael!

Comments

  1. I love the history lesson with the tradition of toasting. Wassail sounds delicious.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What an interesting article. Thanks for researching and for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This sounds like such a warm and comforting drink, and I love the hostory information to go alone with it!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for sharing the history and lore. I never tried wassail I need to change that. Cheers!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

A Cheese Board Anchored on a Trio of Italian Cheeses + A Pinot Nero from Alto Adige #ItalianFWT on CulinaryCam.Com

I am in the process of migrating over to my new domain. Come on over to read " A Cheese Board Anchored on a Trio of Italian Cheeses + A Pinot Nero from Alto Adige " for December's #ItalianFWT.

Connecticut Lobster Rolls, Canned Lobster Bisque, and a 2019 Henry Fessy 'Maître Bonhome' Viré-Clessé #Winophiles

This month the French Winophiles group is looking at affordable wines from Burgundy.  Host Cindy of Grape Experiences wrote: "Burgundy, or Bourgogne, is known for its wines of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir... as well as Aligote, Gamay, Sauvignon, César, Pinot Beurot, Sacy, Melon in lesser quantities. Many of the well-known wines are quite expensive, but there are plenty of values to be found." Read her invitation here. And there won't be a Twitter chat for this event, so you will have to dive into the articles themselves to read about our pairings and findings. Here's the line-up... Wendy Klik from A Day in the Life on the Farm enjoys Domaine Chevillon Chezeaux Bourgogne Hautes Cotes de Nuits, 2018 Paired with a Maple Pecan Chicken . Camilla Mann from Culinary Adventures with Camilla shares her love of Connecticut Lobster Rolls, Canned Lobster Bisque, and a 2019 Henry Fessy 'Maître Bonhome' Viré-Clessé. Jeff Burrows of FoodWineClick! explains why we should Look t...

You're Invited: Take a (Virtual) Hawaiian Holiday with #FoodNFlix

Fall Break, Oahu, October 2017 For June, I am hosting  Food'N'Flix , the movie-watching, food-making group rallied by Heather of  All Roads Lead to the Kitchen . This week, my older son was supposed to graduate from high school and we were supposed to leave on a family vacation to the Big Island. But, as enter our eleventh week of being sheltered in place to flatten the curve of the coronavirus, all of our summer plans were canceled, including this long-planned graduation trip to Hawaii. Boo. I understand the need to self-isolate. And we are abiding by the social distancing guidelines put in place by our state. But, boo, nonetheless. Oahu, October 2017 So for this month's Food'N'Flix, I chose to open up the field and let all of the food bloggers take a (virtual) Hawaiian holiday.  My boys have been to Oahu several times with my parents in recent years as my dad grew up there and wanted to spend some time on the island with his grandsons. Ke...