But punch has been around for centuries, there were punches drunk in America by the Colonists. I’m almost positive George Washington made it
for the troops that very cold winter in Valley Forge – of course that would
have been a hot punch – George was nothing if not considerate.
Punch today can be made with or without alcohol; it can be
served hot or cold. It almost always
includes fruit juice. Its base can be
fruit juice, tea, lots of rum, lots of bourbon, lots of wine, milk or some kind
of carbonated beverage—almost always ginger ale. Although punch is not for the
faint of sugarhearts, it should not contain fruit dyes, icky thick syrup or
anything that has impossible to pronounce chemicals.
It is usually served in a beautiful punch bowl, with a
wonderful glass ladle that is impossible to store correctly and lots of tiny,
tiny cups surrounding it.
I will serve my
punches in punch bowls only when entertaining more than 6 people. For smaller groups I will use a pitcher, no
ladle but I refuse to give up the tiny, tiny cups! But the recipes will be
punch recipes, perfect for 2 to 200.
I am going to start with simple recipes and will build
recipes on the punch basics as I progress.
This is a perfect quick punch that is also a great beverage
to serve any day of the week!
Strawberry Lime Punch
·
1/3 cup sugar
·
10-ounce package frozen strawberries in syrup,
thawed
·
1/2 cup fresh lime juice
·
1/2 cup orange liqueur i.e.- Cointreau, Grand
Marnier (optional)
·
1/2 chilled club soda
·
1 liter ginger ale (or champagne but I refuse to
drink inexpensive champagne or use expensive champagne in a punch so ginger ale
it is)
·
Strawberries, sliced thin, for garnish if
desired
·
Thin lime slices, halved, for garnish if desired
Preparation
·
In a small saucepan, combine the sugar with 1/2
cup water and simmer the mixture for 5 minutes, or until the sugar is
dissolved.
·
Let the sugar syrup cool completely. In a food
processor, purée the strawberries with their syrup and the lime juice, transfer
the mixture to a large punch bowl, forcing it through a fine sieve if desired,
and stir in the sugar syrup, the liqueur (if using), and the club soda.
Since it’s the middle of the week, I’m making this for a
quick meal that I can also serve up easily and take a plate to our next door
neighbor (her husband is in the hospital , Andy will take it over when she gets
home early this evening).
Dinner with punch (this punch is especially good with Latin
food dishes):
·
Chicken Tortilla Casserole
·
Green Salad with Cilantro Dressing
·
Fresh Strawberries
·
Mexican Corn Muffins
·
Ruth’s Delicious Lemon Cake
We just finished dinner, Andy is reading the paper on the
porch, Joni by his side – the punch was a huge success! It is sweet but not
cloyingly so; the lime taste is subtle with the strawberry being the more
dominant taste… yes I will make it again.
Some of you might not like the extra step of forcing the lime/strawberry
mixture through the sieve, but I would recommend it – the punch might be a
little grainy with strawberries seeds if you don’t do it. I know that texture is important in food but
not so much in beverages. I also took
some of the mixture before I added the ginger ale and instead added more club
soda. It wasn’t as sweet as with the
ginger ale and as Andy said “punch should be sweet”, but that is an option if
you things a little less sweet.
If any of you try it, please let me know how you liked it or
any variations you made. We are off to
Colorado on Friday, hoping to make a least one Rocky Mountain High punch, we’ll
see.
Love the picture - hopefully there are no gold balls in your punch bowl?
ReplyDelete