The beauty of sous-vide here is that the infusing time is only hours rather than weeks, and that the flavors don't have a chance to get musty or vinegary, which can happen especially when using herbs or fruit. Making your own liqueur also gives you control over such things as sugar content, type and amounts of flavoring ingredients. The recipe I ended up with was culled from several sources:
Chocolate Liqueur/ Crème de Cacao
Recipe
1 2/3 cup Vodka
1 cup cacao nibs
1 coffee bean
1 vanilla bean
1 1/2 cups simple syrup (I used turbinado and coconut sugars)
1 cup cacao nibs
1 coffee bean
1 vanilla bean
1 1/2 cups simple syrup (I used turbinado and coconut sugars)
Start by filling a heavy stock pot with water and clipping on the sous-vide appliance to the side of the pot. Set the temperature to 135ºF /57ºC though some sources say 140ºF/60ºC ) As the water heats, get a bottle prepared (an old wine bottle with a new cork?) I found a fancy one I'd never used. Funnel one and two-thirds cups of vodka into the bottle, toss in one
coffee bean, then slowly pour in 1 cup of cacao nibs, using a
funnel. Firmly cork the bottle and, when the water is ready, set the bottle
down into the pot and set a timer for 2 hours and 15 minutes. When the time is
up, split a vanilla bean, scrape the seeds into the bottle, drop in the vanilla
bean, shake to combine, and set the timer for 20 more minutes.
Once the infusion is complete, strain the liqueur through a fine sieve to remove the cacao nibs, but reserve the vanilla bean. For more complete chocolate flavor, boil the strained cacao in simple syrup for a few more minutes. This is the classic alcohol+water extraction. Some of the flavor essences are soluble in water and some in alcohol apparently. I then combined the syrup with the infusion.
The last step is straining the liqueur through a coffee filter, (this takes awhile - was going drip by drip, so I switched it out for double cheesecloth) then poured it into a clean bottle and you can add in the reserved vanilla bean (if desired). If you do not run it through a filter, it will still taste good, but the cacao butter will congeal as soon as your liqueur is mixed with another spirit.
As a later P.S. Note - the much simpler and easier method, is to just put it into the freezer for long enough to let the butter harden, then lift off. After bottling, allow it to rest for three days before using. In this time, the flavors of the syrup and the alcohol can meld together, resulting in a much softer flavor. I read that if you were taste it immediately after combining, you would find a harsh ethanol note on the back-end.
Not at all harsh on the back-end, this Brandy Alexander was very fine. I used a Chilean Pisco Brandy, equal parts with my Creme de Cacao and Cream. Grated Scharffenberger dark and nutmeg on top.
Linking this post with Beth Fish Reads for her Weekend Cooking event, just in time to make your Valentine's Day special treat!! My next experiment is Fetterman's (from the Sous-Vide book) Pandan-Infused Cream of Coconut. Oh boy. I plan on using that for coconut rice or perhaps in a Pandana Colada?
P.S. Here's the recipe to make the liquor without a sous vide appliance:
Cacao Nib Tincture
6 to 8 ounces roasted cacao nibs
1 1/2 cups Rittenhouse 100-proof or other high-proof rye whiskey or vodka.
Not at all harsh on the back-end, this Brandy Alexander was very fine. I used a Chilean Pisco Brandy, equal parts with my Creme de Cacao and Cream. Grated Scharffenberger dark and nutmeg on top.
Linking this post with Beth Fish Reads for her Weekend Cooking event, just in time to make your Valentine's Day special treat!! My next experiment is Fetterman's (from the Sous-Vide book) Pandan-Infused Cream of Coconut. Oh boy. I plan on using that for coconut rice or perhaps in a Pandana Colada?
P.S. Here's the recipe to make the liquor without a sous vide appliance:
Cacao Nib Tincture
6 to 8 ounces roasted cacao nibs
1 1/2 cups Rittenhouse 100-proof or other high-proof rye whiskey or vodka.
1 1/2 cups simple syrup
Instructions: Add cacao nibs to a pint jar until approximately 5/6 full. Fill jar with the spirits. Seal and let soak for at least 1 week. Mix in simple syrup, then strain and bottle for use.
Instructions: Add cacao nibs to a pint jar until approximately 5/6 full. Fill jar with the spirits. Seal and let soak for at least 1 week. Mix in simple syrup, then strain and bottle for use.
Whoa! How cool is that?! I had no idea that you could use sous-vide for liqueurs. Now *I* wanna try!
ReplyDeleteI do not own the appliance but the recipe sound wonderful. thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteI've never thought to make my own liqueur. Thanks for the interesting post. What a nice Valentine's Day treat. :)
ReplyDeleteJudee, you don't need sous-vide to make liqueurs, it just takes longer. I linked a recipe above.
ReplyDeleteAmazing use for a gadget that hasn't appealed to me before!
ReplyDeletebest... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
I'm trying to imagine what chocolate liqueur tastes like.... Cheers
ReplyDeleteThat would make a good match for the book at Cook the Books, I love love love chocolate! Bet this was a treat.
ReplyDeleteSo cool! I love making fruit and herb infused alcohol but I love that you used your cacao nibs and made chocolate liqueur. Even though you can make it without, you make me want to get a sous-vide. ;-)
ReplyDeleteVery nice, Claudia. I am curious: where you able to reuse the cacao nibs (after drying them)?
ReplyDeleteYes Simona, I did use some of them in making Brutti-boni cookies, and the rest will probably go in brownies with some nuts. They would be excellent in a nut brittle as well.
ReplyDelete