Search Results (63 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
This lean milk punch is concocted with vanilla-macerated bourbon It takes only a few minutes to prepare (maceration aside), and delivers an outsize glow on a chilly night Though it might make a flu sufferer feel better, don’t wait for the flu to try it.
Ingredients: milk, demerara, bourbon
cooking.nytimes.com
Here's a surprising twist on the traditional savory focaccia: a sweet and tart tangle of rhubarb rests atop a light and chewy bread which is then sprinkled with raw demerara sugar for a satisfying crunch.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Robert Simonson. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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cooking.nytimes.com
Nothing warms a cold body up like a quaff of hot rum punch This version, spiked with cognac and infused with citrus and nutmeg, is exactly what you want to serve at a party once the temperature drops outside If you’re feeling flamboyant, you can flambé it, to the great amusement of your guests
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by William Grimes and takes About 10 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
Ingredients: lemon peel, demerara, scotch
cooking.nytimes.com
One of the most venerable of whiskey-based cocktails, the old-fashioned has a history that stretches back farther than the martini’s For decades it has suffered under the reputation of something your grandmother drank — overly sweet, fruit-laden and spritzed-up But grandma wouldn’t recognize what’s happened to it lately.
cooking.nytimes.com
In this matzo brei (rhymes with fry) recipe, the matzo sheets are browned in butter until crisp before being lightly scrambled with eggs You make this either sweet or savory as you prefer. Add black pepper, plenty of salt and chives for a savory version, or Demerara sugar and maple syrup or honey if you would like something sweeter It’s a fine breakfast or brunch any time of the year, and especially during Passover.
Ingredients: matzo, butter, water, demerara sugar
cooking.nytimes.com
‘‘I’ll raise your salary, and endeavour to assist your struggling family,’’ Scrooge tells Bob Cratchit near the end of A Christmas Carol, ‘‘and we will discuss your affairs this very afternoon, over a Christmas bowl of smoking bishop!’’ This recipe, adapted from the book Drinking With Dickens, by Charles Dickens’s great-grandson, Cedric, reflects Scrooge’s new disposition and largesse perfectly: it’s warm and sweet and meant for sharing (To Cedric Dickens’s recipe, I’ve added some fragrant cardamom pods, because years of drinking glogg have shown me how well they play with orange and wine, but you may omit them).  If you’re unable to find Seville oranges—marked by a pleasant, pronounced bitterness — substitute five navel oranges, and add the juice of one lemon when you add the port to the pan (do not stud the lemon with cloves or roast the lemon with the oranges).
cooking.nytimes.com
Mai tai recipes call for a seldom-employed artificial almond syrup called orgeat, or orzata, depending on whether you’re buying the faux-French version or the faux-Italian one The problem is that faux-ness Though orgeat is conceptually tethered to tiki, its twisted history predates tiki’s by a long stretch
www.delish.com
Dave Kwiatkowski of The Sugar House creates this variation on an old-fashioned by swapping gin for the whiskey. A splash of Campari adds bitterness and a rosy color.
Ingredients: lemon, demerara, campari, grapefruit, salt, gin