Spring is finally
starting to show up in my part of the world, and everyone is preparing for
festivals, outdoor parties and nights under the stars. For those of us who
enjoy pirating, it helps to have some rum available. For those of us who, like
me, are nuts about authenticity, it’s fun to drink the same type of concoctions
that would have been drunk during the Golden Age.
Pirates and rum are
linked forever by place and history. If you want your rum to be “authentic”
then get the cheapest, newest rum available. Pirates drank what there was, and
the main point was to enjoy the effects.
Recipe for Spiced Rum
Spiced Rum is big right
now, and you may want to try making your own. Cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg, all
common in the Caribbean, are the proper spices to use. Recipes are entirely
based on the tastes of the person mixing it, so you can experiment, adding
spices and then letting it steep for up to a week, then straining out any solid
matter and deciding if you like the taste.
Working on such a recipe
is also a good excuse to drink large quantities of rum.
If you are in a bit of a
hurry, you can also produce your own spiced rum by gently heating 2 tablespoons
of brown sugar with one tablespoon of water. When the mixture is a warm liquid with
no visible grains, add your spices and continue heating just until they are thoroughly
absorbed. Add to your rum.
Recipe for Grog
People wishing to be “authentic”
may wish to create some grog. While the grog has been used as a term for nearly
any type of liquor, it was in fact a specific drink with a specific name. A
British naval officer, Admiral Vernon, called “Old Grog” for wearing an old
grosgrain coat, realized in 1740 that giving sailors a pint of liquor every day
and then expecting them to do dangerous and technical work was a bad idea. He therefor
ordered that the rum ration should be cut with 3 parts of water, and added the
daily ration of lime juice (intended to prevent scurvy) to the mix. The recipe
is as follows:
½ cup rum, 1 ½ cups
water, 2 tablespoons lime juice. Mix together. Drink this every day and I guarantee
you won’t get scurvy.
Many of the pirate drinks
were mixed together well in advance and then kept for some special occasion –
plain rum being just fine for everyday drinking. Below are a couple of such
recipes.
Recipe for Lemon Shrub
Lemon Shrub is more of a
cold-weather drink but nights out on the ocean can get chilly. The recipe calls for 2 cups of rum, the zest
of one lemon, ½ cup of lemon juice and ¾ cup of sugar. Mix it all together,
seal it in a glass bottle, and put it away in a cool dark place for a week. To
serve, add 1 part of the rum mixture to 2 parts boiling water. You could
probably use this as an excuse to drink rum for a cold.
Recipe for Milk Punch
Milk Punch sounds fairly
harmless, but don’t drink this and drive. Ingredients are: 2/3 cup of brandy, 1
1/3 cup of rum, 2 cups milk (warmed), 3 cups of water, juice of 2 lemons, zest
of one lemon, 4 tablespoons of sugar, 1/8 teaspoon of ground nutmeg.
Mix all ingredients and
let stand for 2 hours. Then bottle tightly and keep for at least two weeks
before drinking. If it kept for a long time, there is some chance it will
become effervescent (like champagne) and may “pop” when opened. Be careful.
Recipe for Rum Punch
The classic drink,
however, is Rum Punch, Pirates and other denizens of the Caribbean loved this,
and looked for any excuse to mix up a batch. The “theory” behind this punch is
one part sour, two parts sweet, three parts strong, four parts weak.
One way to implement this
is: One cup key lime juice, two cups brown sugar, three cups of rum and four
cups of crushed ice. You may, if you like, substitute regular lime juice for
the juice of key-limes (both are available bottled) and white sugar for brown
(though brown sugar is more like what the pirates would have used.) Either way,
this is very easy to drink, so beware! Pirates didn’t drink and drive, and
neither should you.
Thanks for the recipes! Always look forward to your posts.
ReplyDeleteI just love this blog, always waiting for the next interesting post! I will definitely try out these warmed rum recipes. I live in Finland (cold most of the year), what a perfect excuse.
ReplyDeleteComments like this mean a lot to me. Thanks for your interest!
DeleteYOHO drink it like a pirate straight from the bottle!
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