Tuesday 3 July 2012

Summer Punches. Now.

So. Summer is here, and that means that you need to break out the punches. Not that dreadful stuff made with Sprite and sherbet and the worst possible vodka, but a nicely-made, Victorian-style punch, served in that punchbowl you never get to use, or a repurposed pickle jar, or whatever other sort of urn you happen to have around. If you dont have the matching glasses that once came with your punchbowl, teacups make a weird and elegant substitute, as do Mason jars.

I was just recently in Portland for a couple months for a writer-in-residency sort of affair with Portland State University and Tin House. I held a going-away party and I promised my fellow faculty members that Id come up with literary-themed punches. There is such a thing as a Dickens punch; there is also a Hemingway punch. But we decided to look for less obvious choices, and to drink to women writers for once.

So here are three summery punches to try when the sun comes out. Keep plenty of ice on hand, but dont fill the punch bowl with ice let people add it to their glass instead. And remember that these are only guidelines. Punch, like soup, should never be made with very precise quantities of anything. Mix, taste, adjust, mix and taste again.

Cider Cup for Annie Proulx

Before Annie Proulx became Annie Proulx, she was a how-to writer. She wrote a book about salad gardening and one about constructing insulated window shutters. She wrote about growing grapes and building walkways and making your own food from dairy products. And, with co-author Lew Nichols, she wrote what is still the definitive guide to making hard cider, called Cider: Making, Using & Enjoying Sweet & Hard Cider. She was in her 50s before her first collection of fiction was published. The Shipping News was released, and won a Pulitzer and a National Book Award, when she was 58.

2 parts hard cider

1-2 parts Reeds ginger beer

A splash of Lairds applejack

An optional splash of The Kings Ginger

Sliced apples

Combine all ingredients in a punchbowl.

Rum Punch for Jean Rhys

In honor of Dominican author Jean Rhys, whose Wide Sargasso Sea (a prequel to Jane Eyre) is widely considered one of the best novels of the 20th century. It was her seventh book, published in 1966 when she was 76 years old, and had been out of the public eye for some time. Rum punch figures in the novel:

Standing on the veranda I breathed the sweetness of the air. Cloves I could smell and cinnamon, roses and orange blossoms. And an intoxicating freshness as if all this had never been breathed before. When Antoinette said Come, I will show you the house I went with her unwillingly for the rest of the place seemed neglected and deserted. She led me to a large unpainted room. There was a small shabby sofa, a mahogany table in the middle, some straight-backed chairs and an old oak chest with brass feet like lions claws.

Holding my hand she went up to the sideboard where two glasses of rum punch were waiting for us. She handed me one and said, To happiness.

To happiness, I answered.

2 parts light rum

2 parts dark rum

2 parts orange juice

2 parts mango juice

1 part pineapple juice

Splash of Velvet Falernum

Pineapple wedges or other fruit

Mint leaves

Combine all ingredients in a punchbowl. Make whatever fruit juice substitutions you wish to make.

Champagne Punch for Colette

In 1947, when she was 74 and too arthritic to get out of her Parisian apartment, Colette was given the sort of assignment that only she could attract: Swiss publisher H. L. Mermod offered to send her bouquets of flowers that she would use as inspiration for a series of essays. The result was a book called, in translation, Flowers & Fruit. In this passage, she rejects his latest floral tribute in favor of the more foul and deadly elements of the plant kingdom.

I prefer the harsh fragrance that rises from a slightly sinister or medicinal herb, supposedly poisonous, to that of the insipid elder or even to that of the privet what a splendid incense to my independent and capricious olfactory nerve system is provided by the wild onrush that rises, in summer, from chlorophyll leaf-green ripped off in a storm, the iodine deposited at every low tide, the stench belched forth by the kitchen garden that can contain it no longer, from the heaps of rotting vegetal rubbish in which ferment a congeries of black currant marc, uprooted fennel, and old dahlia bulbs!

This punch might be too pretty for Colette. It is not deadly, at least in reasonable quantities.

2 parts Lillet Blanc (or the new Lillet Rose if you can get it)

1-2 parts Gvine Floraison

1 part St.-Germain (an elderflower liqueur)

1-2 parts Champagne

Sliced strawberries

Combine all ingredients in a punchbowl.

Gvine is a type of French gin made from a distillation of the same grapes used to make cognac. It is flavored with the essence of grape blossoms, as well as nutmeg, coriander, cubeb, ginger, licorice, green cardamom, cassia, and juniper. If you cant get this, try Square One Botanical, which is somewhere between gin and a floral flavored vodka. Hendricks would also work.

This post comes from a column I write for the North Coast Journal called The Drunken Botanist, which is also the title of my next book, due out in March 2013.


Via: Summer Punches. Now.

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