Sunday, November 21, 2021

Apple Mule for Chanukah

 Apple Moscow Mule for Chanukah


Chanukah is just a week away!  Since the first night of Chanukah is during the end of  (American) Thanksgiving weekend, I started to think about food that fits with both holidays.  Then, I thought about apples.  I know it's not usually the first food that comes to mind when you think of Chanukah, but don't forget about what some people like to add to their latkes!!  Also, apple cider doughnuts are perfect for Thanksgiving, fall and Chanukah!

But, there's a bit more to apples that I reflected on...

Chanukah is during a dark part of the year, so a bright and sweet apple could possibly help with adding some light to the dark time.  Also, in the book of D'varim (Deuteronomy) and in Psalms, the apple is referred to as a metaphor to the mitzvot (Jewish commandments):


Deuteronomy 32:10
He found him in a desolate land, in a barren, howling wilderness; He surrounded him, He instructed him, He guarded him as the apple of His eye.
Psalm 17:8
Keep me as the apple of Your eye; hide me in the shadow of Your wings  

So the apple is more than just the sauce that is sometimes added to latkes!  

This cocktail recipe was inspired by the Fall Moscow Mule by halfbakedharvest.  Hope you enjoy it!  Let me know in the comments what you think!

-1 shot vodka

-teaspoon of cinnamon

-a tablespoon of lime juice

-2 shots of ginger beer (or ginger ale)

-2-3 shots of apple cider

Add ice to a martini shaker, then the vodka, cinnamon and lime juice.  Then pour into a glass (or mug).  Add the ginger beer and the cider.  Garnish with an apple slice and enjoy!

Friday, February 12, 2021

Three Purim Cocktails for Three Women in the Purim Story

Three Purim Cocktails for 3 Women in Megillat Esther!


Happy Purim!  This is going to be a topsy-turvey Purim for a topsy-turvey year!  To keep the joy going, I thought, why create just one drink??  I wanted to create 3 drink recipes to allow people to choose what works for them, especially this year for a Pandemic Purim, and when Purim is on a Friday--why not extend the Purim fun into the weekend??

My brother Josh gave me a fantastic idea:  to create drink recipes for women in the megillah!  So, I went with this idea and created drink recipes for Vashti, Esther, and Zeresh!

Esther Olive Oil Gimlet-
-1 shot (1 1/2 tbsp) gin
-1 lime cut into 4 wedges
-a few fresh sprigs of mint
-splash of olive oil (1/2 tsp)
-ice cubes
-(optional:  1 tbsp of simple syrup)

-put a couple of ice cubes, shot of gin, freshly squeezed lime from 2 lime wedges, and the simple syrup if you opt for that in a shaker, shake 
-put a couple of ice cubes in a cocktail glass, pour the cocktail into the glass
-add the sprigs of fresh mint leaves
-pour a splash of olive oil on top

Zeresh (Haman's wife) Hidden Cocktail-
-1 shot of baileys 
-optional:  1 shot of berry liquor
-1 tsp of berry or fig jam
-2-3 shots of almond or other milk

-pour a shot of baileys, optional berry liquor, and milk into a glass
-drop a spoon of jam into the cocktail

Vashti Festive Punch-

-slice up some fruit (such as apples, oranges, berries, mango-fruit can be frozen!)
-shot of rum (or skip the rum if you want to make it non-alcoholic)
-either 3 shots of bubbly wine or seltzer
-1 shot of either orange, grapefruit, or pineapple juice

-add a few ice cubes to a glass
-add the chopped fruit
-pour the rum into the glass
-add the bubbly wine or seltzer

-then add the juice

Esther Olive Oil Gimlet-

The story of Esther is very much connected to olive oil.  She uses olive oil to beautify herself before the pageant with the king.  It is also told that olives were a main part of her diet while living in the palace when there might not have been many options for her to eat.  Her other name:  Hadassah, alludes to a myrtle tree, found in the middle east where the story of Purim takes place.  So, this cocktail has the greenery of the Hadassah and olive oil.  It also has a Middle Eastern flavour which I hope gives you a little taste of the story.  

Vashti Festive Punch-

For the Vashti drink-I thought it would be fitting to have a lot of choice, since Vashti chose to stand up to the king and refuse to dance at his party!  So, this punch is a very festive drink and it's also sort of a "choose your own adventure" drink.  If you want to add rum and bubbly wine, go for it!  If you want to add juice, go for it!  If you'd rather skip the juice and just add fruit, that works too!  If you'd rather trade the alcohol for seltzer, it'll still be delicious!  Hope that you enjoy this bubbly celebratory drink, which could also work as a Shabbat drink if you want to extend the Purim fun into Shabbat!


Zeresh Hidden Cocktail-

Oy....Zeresh was Haman's wife who did a bad thing in the story...she was the one who suggested to Haman how to kill Mordecai.  As many of you may know, there is a tradition to make hamantashen (triangular shaped cookies with fillings inside) on Purim to help to remind us to behave the OPPOSITE way of Haman (and other reasons too).  So, I thought that cocktail with a hidden "filling" would be perfect for the Zeresh cocktail-a kind of liquid hamantashen.  This drink can be made dairy with creamy liquors and milk, or non-dairy with almond (or non-dairy) liquor and non-dairy milk.  It could be a great dessert cocktail for the end of the evening, or a brunch cocktail for a festive Purim or Shabbat Seudah!  

 

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Rosh Hashana Apple of the Orchard Martini


Wow!  I can't believe that a new Jewish Year of 5779 is about to begin!  It's also about to be the one year anniversary of reviving this blog and starting my new instagram account @areasontolchayim!  

This year presents a bit of a challenge for me with this blog and my instagram.  I already posted many drink ideas last year, so this year I'm going to face up to the challenge to add as many new drinks as I can to this blog.  

Speaking of new things, let's talk about the New Year!  I was thinking about the tradition of eating apples with honey on Rosh Hashana and the reasons behind the tradition.  Many of us are familiar with the reasons of it's sweet and we want to have a sweet year, and that the fruit is round, just like a year begins and ends like a never-ending circle.  I was interested in finding out which instances an apple is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.

In Isaiah, apples are mentioned as part of an orchard which is withering:

"Be dismayed, O farmers, wail, O vinedressers, over the wheat and barley, because the harvest of the field has perished. 12The grapevine is dried up, and the fig tree is withered; the pomegranate, palm, and apple—all the trees of the orchard— are withered."
-Isaiah

In the book of D'varim (Deuteronomy) and in Psalms, the apple is referred to as a metaphor to the mitzvot (Jewish commandments):

Deuteronomy 32:10
He found him in a desolate land, in a barren, howling wilderness; He surrounded him, He instructed him, He guarded him as the apple of His eye.
Psalm 17:8
Keep me as the apple of Your eye; hide me in the shadow of Your wings  

I think the idea of an apple being something to protect and to have in your mind or your eye is a nice idea.  It's up to all of us to take care of the orchards of apples, perhaps by trying to take on new mitzvot or to continue protecting the ones we are already taking on.  This idea helped to guide me with the Rosh Hashana Apple of the Orchard Martini.  Hopefully, this cocktail will not only go with the sweet theme of the holiday, but also help to inspire us all to improve in taking care of the orchard of mitzvot and each other in this new year of 5779.

Shana Tova U'Metukah!  

Recipe for Rosh Hashana Apple of the Orchard Martini:

The day or two (or even week before):  take 2-3 tea bags of apple tea (I like the Wizzotsky brand called Apple Delight), add them to a large plastic or glass bottle and fill with cold water.  Place in the fridge and let it sit for a day.

In a martini shaker add the following:
-2 shots of either vodka or rum
-(optional) 1 shot of sour apple liquor
-2 shots of lemonade
-3 shots of the apple iced tea
-ice cubes

Shake, pour, and serve!  You can also add a slice of apple to the glass as a festive garnish.

-

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Pesach Standing Drink

Pesach/Passover Standing Drink

Wishing you and your families and friends a wonderful Pesach holiday!  Here are my thoughts on my drink which I created for the seder this year:

Vehi she'amdah
The promise to our ancestors and to us STANDS.

I've been thinking about this phrase a lot recently with the standing and marching that I've been a part of (along with other cousins and friends).  I decided to look up other times when someone says "amad" in the tanakh/Bible:  

1)  when Yosef stood before his brothers in Egypt, about to reveal his true identity

2)  another time when  "amdah" is mentioned:

​ [פרק ל' פסוק ט']
וַתֵּרֶא לֵאָה כִּי עָמְדָה מִלֶּדֶת וַתִּקַּח אֶת-זִלְפָּה שִׁפְחָתָהּ וַתִּתֵּן אֹתָהּ לְיַעֲקֹב לְאִשָּׁה
when Leah took her "handmaid" Zilpah and gave her to Ya'akov as another wife, helping to continue the line of children in the family.

During the seder, I think it is important to not only discuss the story of the Exodus, but also where we came from?  Where were we before we even got to Egypt.  When we look back, we read about Avraham standing (nitzavim) before the three guests at the tent.  We read about Leah, as I mentioned earlier and Yosef standing before his brothers as the second to Pharaoh in charge of Egypt.  They were standing up for themselves, but also for others.  

So, as we are about to stand for Vehi Sheamda, I would like to think about what I stand for?  What do I march for?  What promise do I think still holds between all of us and God?  What promise do we need to make sure we keep for each other?

And as we're standing, we usually hold our second glass of wine.  I would like to add a "stand" of fruit to represent the extra sweetness that we can add when we stand together to help to make the world a bit better and continue to help to keep our promises with each other and might I add, to God.  

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Comfort Chanukah Drink

Chanukah is one of my favorite holidays!  There's not a lot of requirements, the ritual of the holiday (lighting candles) is at night, and it's very nice and lovely to be around lights (and oily food!).  It's also a tradition to have the chanukah candles lit in a window, visible to many who pass by your window.  These lights not only add more physical light in dark winter skies, but also send a message that this home is a Jewish home, proudly celebrating a moment in Jewish history.

There is another message which I think is worth publicizing along with the lights of the candles, which inspired this Chanukah cocktail.  There is a legend that there was a woman named Judith or Yehudeet (similar name to Judah, like the Maccabee!  Coincidence??  ;)  who helped to lure one of the leaders of the Assyrian army into her tent for some warm milk and cheese.  She was able to then kill him (or have him killed?  ), therefore helping the Maccabees in the war.  There are many stories about Jewish women, but they are not always publicized or even mentioned.  This Chanukah, I am inspired to continue to tell and learn stories of Judith and others who may not have a voice to share their stories.  This cocktail is bright, like the candles of the chanukiah, and it is a dairy drink, perhaps like the drink which Judith gave to the army leader.  May we all be inspired by the lights of Chanukah to tell stories, learn from them, and be comforted by them.

Recipe for Chanukah Comfort Drink:

-2 spoonfulls of white hot chocolate mix (I like the kind from Second Cup, Canada)
-1 shot of chocolate liquor
-optional:  1 shot of peppermint schnapps
-the rest of the mug either with warm milk or with some hot water and some warm milk

Chag Urim V'Sameach!
Happy Chanukah!

Monday, October 23, 2017

Stars while Travelling Cocktail

"Lechi lach, to a land that I will show you"
Debbie Friedman (based on the text from this week's Torah portion)

The cocktail which I created is in honor of this week's Torah portion, Lech Lecha.  In the text (Genesis 12 and 15) it says:

יֹּ֤אמֶר יְהוָה֙ אֶל־אַבְרָ֔ם לֶךְ־לְךָ֛ מֵאַרְצְךָ֥ וּמִמּֽוֹלַדְתְּךָ֖ וּמִבֵּ֣ית אָבִ֑יךָ אֶל־הָאָ֖רֶץ אֲשֶׁ֥ר אַרְאֶֽךָּ׃
The LORD said to Abram, “Go forth from your native land and from your father’s house to the land that I will show you.
2
וְאֶֽעֶשְׂךָ֙ לְג֣וֹי גָּד֔וֹל וַאֲבָ֣רֶכְךָ֔ וַאֲגַדְּלָ֖ה שְׁמֶ֑ךָ וֶהְיֵ֖ה בְּרָכָֽה׃
I will make of you a great nation, And I will bless you; I will make your name great, And you shall be a blessing.

יּוֹצֵ֨א אֹת֜וֹ הַח֗וּצָה וַיֹּ֙אמֶר֙ הַבֶּט־נָ֣א הַשָּׁמַ֗יְמָה וּסְפֹר֙ הַכּ֣וֹכָבִ֔ים אִם־תּוּכַ֖ל לִסְפֹּ֣ר אֹתָ֑ם וַיֹּ֣אמֶר ל֔וֹ כֹּ֥ה יִהְיֶ֖ה זַרְעֶֽךָ׃
He took him outside and said, “Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are able to count them.” And He added, “So shall your offspring be.”

Abram, who will later be named Abraham, is sent by God to leave his homeland and travel to a new country.  He is promised by God that he will be blessed with as many descendants as the stars in the sky.  
There is much that can be learned from this text, but what I take from it nowadays is this:  it has been hard to see where we are going and what direction things are going to take here in the U.S., in Israel, and in the world.  I have been feeling a bit lost sometimes about what to do next, how to help, etc.  Sometimes it is hard to see the stars both literally, as a New Yorker, and figuratively.  Hopefully this cocktail will help to guide us and remind us to look at the positives, and take it step by step in our journeys.

Here is the recipe:
-1 shot vodka
-1 shot St. Germaine liquor or triple sec
-2-3 shots of lychee juice
-1 slice of star fruit
Optional step before making the drink:
This idea was suggested by my Ima (mom):
-dip the glass rim in water and a bit of lime juice, then sprinkle some brown sugar on a plate and dip the glass rim in the sugar (this should give the glass a bit more sparkle, and it can also represent the second promise about the descendants being as numerous as the dust of the earth)
Enjoy and feel free to add in the comments if you made this drink and if you have any suggestions!

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Build Your Own Sukkah in a Glass!

Build Your Own Sukkah in a Glass!

Thank you for reading my blog!  I hope that those of you who tried out the Pomegranate Tekiah drink enjoyed it.  Those of you who didn't get a chance to try it yet, it's not too late!!  It is still the season of pomegranates and wishing a happy new year to those who go by the Jewish/Hebrew calendar sometimes.  

This drink is for the upcoming holiday of Sukkot, which starts this Wednesday Oct 4th in the evening and ends next week on Oct 13th with the holidays of Shmini Atzeret and Simchat Torah.  This drink can work for the whole week, either as a cocktail, as a shot, or even as  a non-alcoholic drink.

I would like to dedicate this drink blog and recipe to those affected by recent hurricanes.  I hope that this brings a little more hope and sweetness to the world and inspiration for people to give and donate to help with the hurricane relief.  

Sukkot is a time where some Jews build huts or sukkot to eat in and sometimes even sleep in for 7 days of the holiday.  One of the main reasons that we have this practice is to help to remind us of the time with the people of Israel lived in huts on the journey from Egypt to the land of Israel.  This holiday brings back memories to when I was in Canada with my family and we would often be huddled in winter coats and gloves in the sukkah, rushing to pack up the tables and chairs immediately after the meal so that it wouldn't get rained on...which brings me to think about those affected by the hurricanes.  As I sit in the many sukkot of family and friends in Chicago, New Jersey, and in New York City, I will definitely be thinking of those who have no permanent home, or whose home(s) was damaged or destroyed.  

May the evening blessing of wishing for a sukkah-type shelter of peace come true for us all (hapores sukkat shalom aleinu).  

recipe for build-a-sukkah-cocktail:
-1 shot of chocolate liquor
-optional:  1 shot of chocolate-flavored vodka
-optional:  1 shot of peppermint schnapps
-2 (or more, depending on taste) shots of either milk, almond milk, rice milk, name-your-choice of milk
-1 mint leaf
-2, 3 tooth picks

recipe for non-alcoholic version:

-1 shot of chocolate syrup instead of chocolate liquor
-3 shots (or more) of name-your-choice of milk
-1 mint leaf
-2, 3 tooth picks

Check out my instagram account @areasontolchayim for pictures, stories, and more!

Chag Sameach!  Have a wonderful Sukkot holiday!