December 14, 2009

DIY Limoncello

Limoncello

I was completely fine with the manufactured limoncello, the Italian lemon liquer, that are now easily available at BevMo...until Justin and Olaina came back from Rome with a small bottle of the real stuff.

I have been in search for a palatable manufactured one since then. And I have not found one that even comes close to the little bottle Italy-shaped bottle from Rome.

While I researched for those, I found that limoncello could be made at home, and found a recipe.
  • One bottle (750 ml) Everclear 151 proof.
  • One bottle (750 ml) vodka (I would recommend a decent bottle, like Smirnoff, but nothing too extravagant)
  • Peels from 20-25 lemons--organic and/or wax-free preferred.
  • Simple syrup made with 4 cups sugar and 4 cups of water.
ETA - Grappa-based Limoncello: 

Recently, I've been making limoncello with a bottle of Grappa Piave (about $27 for one liter--best value!), 12-15 lemons, and simple syrup made with 2 cups each of water and sugar. The method is exactly the same. More flavorful, a little smoother, but still pack a good punch.

Hell, yes! I made the Strawberry-infused sake already. This should be cake walk.

You soak pith-free peels of 20-25 lemons, preferably organic and/or wax-free, in a bottle of Everclear and a bottle of regular Smirnoff vodka for 2-4 weeks in a cool, dark place. Drain and add simple syrup. Stick it in the fridge for another week. And ecco! There's your limoncello.

(No wax-free lemon? Let's wash off the wax! Bring a pot of water to boil. Drop the lemons in a few at a time and slosh them around for 15 seconds. Take them out and risnse well.)

Yes, dear. I did say Everclear. The 151-proof one aka the only kind legally available in California.

Limoncello

Everclear to get the flavors out. Good vodka to round out the edges. I found some other recipes that use 2 90-proof Smirnoff instead. But I think Everclear probably does a better job of flavor extraction.

But then, there were a few hurdles.

The first hurdle, finding organic, wax-free lemons. I'm sure I probably could pick up those at Whole Foods or something, but I'd prefer someone's backyard lemons. So I bartered with my coworker Rob: a bottle of limoncello for 20+ lemons.

The second hurdle, peeling them lemons. Okay. Call me paranoid. From what I read up, a wee little bit of white pith could turn the batch bitter. So, I painstakingly, may be even unnecessarily, scrape each and single piece of lemon peel I carved off the lemons. It took at least 2 hours.

I set up a little station in front of the TV with a bag of lemon, a glass jar, a garbage bowl, a peeler, and a small paring knife and put in a DVD. And to town I went on the lemons.

The rest is gravy.

Limoncello

You just have to plan it out, you know. Obviously, you can make it today and have the stuff tomorrow. My first batch was done in the fall. The second batch is now wrapping up in the fridge, waiting to be bottled for Christmas.

I found Cost Plus to have all sorts of bottles. I also bought a few little jars to make sample shots for Limoncello virgins. Just tell your friends to KEEP THE BOTTLES for refill later. ;-)

You can use all sorts of other bottles for this too. Paul gave me an empty scotch bottle with a cork-top which is totally awesome. And here I am, downing a New Zealand sparkling mineral water for the bottle for Shane.

Food.OakMonster.com - Limoncello


The effort and patience to make this was definitely huge. But trust me. It's soooo worth it! It tastes fabulous and make fantastic gifts.

1 comment:

ladygoat said...

Lovely! Must remember to do this for next Christmas!

Who am I kidding? I want to this now, for me:)