Follow the Harvard Press on FacebookFollow us on Facebook!  and TwitterFollow us on Twitter!

Thursday, May 17, 2012  ·  Contact Us Register  ·  Subscribe/Renew  ·  Login
 

 

The views expressed by Harvard Press bloggers do not necessarily represent the views of the Harvard Press. The Press is not liable for opinions expressed in the blogs or for the accuracy presented there.
 

Latest Posts
  • Retirement Your Way
    Widow


Harvard Blogs
Make Your Own Wild Raspberry Liqueur

Wild raspberries (aka “blackcaps”) are my favorite weed, and they are just fruiting now. If you have never tried my wild raspberry liqueur, you might insult them as aggressive and invasive. Many products even boast that they will eradicate them. But I like them so much, I’m more inclined to relocate them than murder them.

I’ve created two enormous wild raspberry hedges in my backyard, plus a few other healthy patches, and various volunteers keep popping up everywhere. The most delicious thing I ever did with wild raspberries was to make liqueur. Liqueurs are much easier to make than beer or wine because there’s no fermentation involved. You use a spirit, such as vodka or gin, as the starting point. You can age or store it in any glass jar. No equipment needed.

Basically, you infuse raspberries or whatever in vodka (that is, crush the fruit, mix into the booze, and let it sit in a covered jar) at a ratio of 2 parts spirit to 1 part crushed fruit. And you could experiment and use gin or other spirit too; vodka is nice because it doesn’t add its own flavor, so you can really isolate the flavor that you’re trying to preserve. But in keeping in line with my own actual success story in this regard, say 2 cups vodka to 1 cup raspberries.

Let it sit for three months. Or maybe less. Or even more. It depends on who you ask.

Strain it and measure the result. Say you wind up with 3 cups of infused vodka. Add thick simple syrup (2 parts sugar to 1 part water, which you mix until dissolved with or without heating it first; some argue that heating it changes the flavor) in a ratio of 1 part syrup to 2 parts infused vodka.

Let that age for a month, then drink. Some fruits take longer to mature, so if it tastes awful, let it age again for a few more months and then try another sip.

Here’s a concise version for reference:

Jonathan’s Anything Liqueur

2 parts vodka to 1 part crushed fruit

1 part thick simple syrup (2 parts sugar to 1 part water) to 2 parts strained vodka/fruit

Infuse for 3 months

Add simple syrup

Age for 1 month

Drink, preferably with me.

Comments
 
Lynda King
Friday, July 08, 2011 at 7:41 AM
I'm with you on black raspberries! I have some that were so pervasive I decided to give them space of their own, and now have a long patch right next to my driveway. The location is a bit inconvenient, but that's where they like to grow. They've rewarded me with black raspberry liqueur and black raspberry jam so far.
Judy Warner
Saturday, July 09, 2011 at 5:58 AM
I love wild blackberries and used to make a great, similar liquer with a slightly different process. The sheep ate all the bushes though. Anyone have any wild blackberries to share??

Judy
Jonathan Feist
Saturday, July 09, 2011 at 10:01 AM
I do have extras you can have, Judy! Let's e-mail to coordinate it.
Judy Warner
Saturday, July 09, 2011 at 8:46 PM
Blackberries? or raspberries?
Jonathan Feist
Sunday, July 10, 2011 at 7:39 AM
These are raspberries, sorry. Hollow center. I haven't seen wild blackberries here.
Post Comment
 

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

CAPTCHA image
Enter the code shown above:

CLICK AN AD!
Dinner at Deadline
Pinards
Harvard Home & Yard Services
Turbo Lube
Harvard Custom Woodworking
Bird House Organic Land Care
Whole Earth
Marcus Lewis Day Camp
Inspired Design
Apex Painting
Copyright 2006–2012 by The Harvard Press LLC  ·  PO Box 284  ·  Harvard, Massachusetts 01451  ·  Phone 978.456.3700  ·  Fax 978.274.5605  ·  Terms Of Use  ·  Privacy Statement  ·  Site Credit