Friday, July 18, 2025

Apricots and Brandy

You didn’t think we were done with apricots, did you? I still have a box and a half on my kitchen floor, so I’m still experimenting.

I already mentioned Apricot Brandy experiment number one: a pretty generic three-ingredient Apricot Brandy Recipe from Food.com. It called for mixing apricots, sugar and vodka and letting them sit in a dark space for about eight days. I’m four days in, and a little concerned that the sugar isn’t mixing well even with daily bottle-tipping.

After four days, there's still a layer of sugar at the bottom.

For my second experiment, I stayed with vodka but searched for something with more of a twist. I found it in Alton Brown’s Orca Apricot Brandy. This recipe was a similar concoction to the first, but this time with a kind of simple syrup using apricot jam as a base. It went on the shelf Wednesday afternoon. I’ll know if it worked in about a week.

Finally, I felt like I really wanted to make apricot brandy with actual…brandy. For some reason, maybe because I felt like I was stepping up my game using real brandy, I also wanted to use honey as a sweetener. After some searching, I found this recipe for Sandsedge Brandy from the Fantasy Inn blog.

It’s from a fascinating little blog I’d never heard of before, a recipe designed to pair with a scene from a book I’d never heard of, but I was instantly enchanted.

The blog reviews fantasy titles. Blogger Wol developed this recipe to pair with Fool’s Errand by Robin Hobb. I’m not endorsing the book; I’ve never read it. It might be great; it might be terrible. However, the whole idea of creating a drink for a book charmed me, so I decided to give it a try.


It was a pretty-straightforward recipe. I had just enough of my own home-grown honey to use in the simple syrup, and the jar looks amazing sitting on the cupboard shelf next to the other two. (I kind of want to dive in now, it’s so pretty.)

Apricots, brandy, honey, sugar and time--hopefully a recipe for success.

The downside is that I will need to wait four to eight weeks to find out if it worked. That’s an upside, too, though. Some things just get better with time.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Apricots and Vodka

Who wants apricots? 

My dad called last week with an offer to lift me up in the tractor bucket if I wanted to try to strip the upper branches of their prolific tree. Of course, I can’t pass up the opportunity for free fruit. Within an hour or so, my 13-year-old son and I were sitting—uncomfortably—in the bucket of my dad’s small tractor in the 95-degree heat, trying to reach golden fruit that was just out of reach. Even the bucket of the small Kubota wouldn’t reach the loaded uppermost branches.

This is what a tractor bucket full of apricots looks like.
Still, it didn’t take long to fill six small boxes. The next question—what to do with them? While I expected to share the apricots, it turned out my parents didn’t want any of them.

As I mentioned in my last blog post, I really have been looking into traditional winemaking. While it seemed the perfect solution to some of that fruit, I’m nowhere near ready to dive in—no knowledge, no equipment. I posed the question of apricot wine to my husband, perhaps looking for tacit permission to dive into supply purchasing. He responded that he would prefer apricot brandy.

Well, I don’t know how to make brandy, either. I bet it’s more difficult than wine.

Still, I took to my ever handy Google and managed to pull up some ideas. It turns out, you can make a pretty good apricot brandy simply by soaking apricots in, well, brandy. Or sometimes vodka. I confess, I don’t understand why apricot brandy would call for vodka. Either way, though, it seemed simple enough.

It took me a couple of days to implement my plan. Saturday was taken up with a five-hour round trip to pick up my 12-year-old from ranch camp, and then by last-minute cooking for church fellowship on Sunday. I finally managed to get to a liquor store for some vodka and brandy. (Not being a regular in liquor stores, that felt like a whole adventure itself. Who knew there were so many kinds of vodka?)

I decided to experiment with several different recipes. The first one I tried was a generic Apricot Brandy Recipe from Food.com. With three ingredients--none of which was brandy--it seemed by far the simplest. It called for dried apricots but, rightly or wrongly, I figure fresh must be better, right? Okay, I get that the dried apricots must add to the depth and intensity, but the whole point of this is to use all my fresh apricots. Anyway, by Sunday afternoon, I had the mixture of apricots, sugar and vodka sitting on a dark shelf next to my homemade vinegar.

Apricot brandy attempt number one, ready for the shelf.

The rest had to wait, though.

Monday and Tuesday were swallowed whole by work at the newspaper. Then it was Wednesday. The rest of the family was asleep, including the rescue kitten nestled in my lap.

I’d already skipped out on an AWANA breakfast meeting, I had a board of commissioners meeting to Zoom and an antique airshow to attend with my family (and cover for the newspaper), and I was looking around my house with the paralysis of someone who has a ton to do and no energy to do it. And all…those…apricots.

Get out the dehydrator; it's time to tackle those apricots!


Thursday, July 10, 2025

Fermenting…Again

 

Nearly three years. Nearly three years. I can’t believe it’s been that long since I poked away at this blog. So much has happened—and yet not so much.

I always think I’m going to be so productive during the summer. After all, I’m down to one job instead of two, and homeschool has slacked off, if not stopped, for a couple of months. It doesn’t happen, though. Summer rushes by just as quickly as any other season, maybe more so.

It’s July, and I’m still trying to find my footing after an exhausting spring. My house is a mess. My garden is a mess. My flowerbeds are a mess. I’ve gained even more weight. I’m a full-fledged member of the sandwich generation. My two chickens are living in a dog kennel because I haven’t had time or energy to fix their coop.

Despite all that, though, I’ve been a fermenting powerhouse. It’s as if all my homesteading instincts that get bottled up during the winter months have come pouring out at once. Yes, I’m still making my own vinegar. (Did I ever mention the vinegar?)

I managed to make my most successful batch of kvass ever last week, along with a successful batch of old-fashioned ginger ale. My grandmothers never made ginger ale, as far as I know, but if they did, they would have made it just like this old-fashioned method.

It's already time to make some more ginger ale and kvass.

Now, I’ve got my own creation in the works, a strawberry-apple ale using the same method. I’ve made apple ale before with good success, so we’ll see how this goes.

My attempt at strawberry-apple ale and homemade sourdough, side by side.

On top of all that, I’m back at creating my own sourdough starter, this time with help from The Perfect Loaf blog.

I will admit that I haven’t always followed his directions perfectly.
Once or twice I’ve forgotten to tend it for a couple of days, and it has formed what one blogger colorfully called “hootch.” (Yeah, fermentation is a natural process that comes with certain side effects, some of them delicious.)

Recently fed, this sourdough starter is just beginning to bubble again.

No worries, though. As long as it hasn’t gotten too far, you can stir that liquid back into the batch and feed away without any negative side effects. My sourdough bread won’t get you drunk, I promise.

I haven’t made my first loaf yet, but I’ve used the discard in a couple of recipes and…so far, so sourdough. One of my favorites so far is this Sourdough Cinnamon Quick Bread from Farmhouse on Boone. No photos, I’m afraid. It was demolished far too quickly.

Now, heaven help me, I’m researching barley tea, apple presses and traditional wine-making methods. Somebody save me from myself.