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Recipe for Warmth: Hot Apple-Ginger Toddy
Straight Up Cocktails and Spirits

2009_11_20-HotAppleToddy3.jpgLooking for a hot drink to cozy up to on a crisp fall evening? Something with the sweetness of apples and honey, the bright zing of ginger and lemon, and a little extra boozy warmth? How about a Hot Apple-Ginger Toddy?

 
 

I've been on a ginger tea kick lately. Late at night, craving something warm, but still a little bracing, I've been slicing up chunks of the spicy root and steeping them in hot water. (I've even started eating the delicious, softened pieces once the tea's done.)

Knowing how well ginger plays with apples, I thought I'd improvise something with a little more substance - and a some alcohol too. I though I'd try making a Hot Apple Toddy with fresh ginger root.

A cousin of that perennial cold season favorite, the Hot Toddy (whiskey, tea or hot water, lemon, honey), the Hot Apple Toddy's a deliciously apple-y fall classic, a simple blend of dark spirits, hot apple cider, and spice.

Ordinarily, I'd use bourbon for a recipe like this, but I'd recently picked up some blended applejack, an old-timey American liquor made with an apple brandy base (think of an apple-flavored whiskey) and it seemed like a perfect fit.

I chopped up some ginger and added it to the fresh apple cider, along with a cinnamon stick, and warmed the mixture in a saucepan on the stove. (If I'd had any whole cloves on hand, I would have added them too.) After letting things simmer a bit, I poured everything into a mug, added the liquor, plus a little honey and lemon for extra depth.

And yes, after my drink was done, those ginger chunks tasted especially good.

2009_11_20-HotAppleToddyIng.jpg

Hot Apple-Ginger Toddy
makes one drink

a cup or so of apple cider
1 to 2 ounces of dark liquor (I used applejack, but bourbon or dark rum would work well too)
a drizzle of honey
a squeeze of lemon
peeled fresh gingerroot, coarsely chopped (I used a thumb-sized piece)
mulling spices (cinnamon sticks, whole cloves, allspice, nutmeg - whatever you have on hand)
Optional garnishes: cinnamon stick stirrer, lemon slice, apple slice, ginger slice

Add the ginger and mulling spices to the cider and simmer in a saucepan over medium-low heat for at least 5 minutes (or a full 15 or more if you want full flavor). Drizzle some honey into a mug and add the liquor, hot cider, and a squeeze of lemon juice. Stir.

What are you drinking to keep warm this fall?

Nora Maynard is a longtime home mixologist and an occasional instructor at NYC’s Astor Center. She is a contributor to The Business of Food: Encyclopedia of the Food and Drink Industries and is the recipient of the American Egg Board Fellowship in culinary writing at the Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow. She previously covered food and drink in film at The Kitchn in her weekly column, The Celluloid Pantry.

Related: Recipe Review: Hot Rum Cow

(Images: Nora Maynard)

Comments (6)

My husband has a fondness for hot buttered rum but I don't like rum at all, so I use a delicious German liquor called Apfelkorn that tastes just like boozy applejuice instead. Would work well in your concoction here too I suspect

posted by d4kk1tt3n on November 20th 2009 at 2:03pm
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Really wonderful idea. I love a Hot Toddy and your version sounds especially cozy.

posted by SarahBerneche on November 21st 2009 at 4:00pm
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I love hot apple drinks so I will definitely try this. Thanks.

posted by sarah9876 on November 21st 2009 at 5:21pm
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Actually, pears instead of apples make better ginger tea. I always use pear ginger red date (a.k.a jujube). Nothing beats these three ingredients to prevent cold and strengthen the immune system.

posted by bobejina on November 22nd 2009 at 7:41am
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This drink was DELICIOUS! I threw some cinnamon sticks, cloves, and a touch of brown sugar into some unsweetened apple juice and then served it with the honey, squeeze of lime, and some bourbon. It warms you right up and was a greay way to cozy-up a cold, wet day!

posted by misplacedtexan on December 1st 2009 at 12:37pm
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(and I included the ginger too, of course)

posted by misplacedtexan on December 1st 2009 at 12:38pm
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