Showing posts with label flavored vodka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flavored vodka. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Hazelnut Vodka

If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice. 

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

I’ve mentioned before about the amazing cherry tree in our back garden in Paris years ago but I don’t think I’ve written about the prolific hazelnut tree out front. It was actually in our neighbor’s yard, Madame Coucou we named her because that is what she called out over our party wall to get my attention. Coucou, coucou! Always with a big smile.

The tree grew right up near that wall so a goodly portion of it hung over our side. It took me a while to figure out what they were because I had never seen a fresh nut in its little fuzzy green outer coat. As they ripen, that turns brown and the nuts are ready for harvest, often falling to the ground on their own. During the season, hazelnuts were literally everywhere.


Unlike the cherries that we turned into jam and pie and cherry bounce, we just shelled and ate the hazelnuts. I wish I had had this recipe back then! 

Hazelnut Vodka 

If you have hazelnuts with the shells still on, it will take about 8 ¾ oz or 248g to get the required amount shelled for this recipe. This recipe is adapted from one in Abundance: Eating and living with the seasons by Mark Diacono.  

Ingredients
3 ½ oz or 100g shelled hazelnuts
¾ cup or caster sugar 
4 cups or 946ml vodka 
¼ teaspoon ground allspice

Method
Preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C. Spread the hazelnuts out on a baking pan and roast them for about 15 minutes or so, checking after 10. The skins should darken but you don’t want them to burn!

Remove the pan from the oven and pour the hazelnuts into a towel.  


Wrap them up and leave them to steam for a couple of minutes. 

Rub them through the towel, squeezing and rolling to remove most of the skins. 


Pick the hazelnuts out of the skins and put them into a food processor. Use a few short pulses to grind them into a coarse rubble. You want some small bits and some medium bits. Nothing too fine. 


In a large, wide-mouthed jar, stir the sugar into 1 cup or 240ml of the vodka until it dissolves. 


Add the chopped hazelnuts, allspice and the rest of the vodka and stir together. 


Stir well! 


Screw the lid on and set it someplace out of direct sunlight, where you’ll see it. 


Shake the jar once a day. 


I left mine for about a week before tasting it. Divine! Very hazelnutty! Leave it another week or two if you’d like – I did - but it’s very drinkable after one week.

Strain through a fine sieve and/or muslin and funnel into a sterilized bottle or jar. 


Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

I made this last Christmastime and after we sipped a bit, I stashed it behind the bar and forgot about it. I pulled it back out when I was writing this post to discover that sediment had settled to the bottom. I decanted it, leaving that sediment behind and it's much less opaque now. Still delicious though! 

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

Welcome to the 8th edition of Alphabet Challenge 2026, brought to you by the letter H. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the H recipes below:


To check out the Alphabet Challenges for 2024 and 2025, click here.



Pin this Hazelnut Vodka!

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

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Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Mirabelle Plum Vodka

Deliciously fruity, tart but not too sweet, this Mirabelle plum vodka is great in cocktails, served over ice with soda water or simply sipped straight.

Food Lust People Love: Deliciously fruity, tart but not too sweet, this Mirabelle plum vodka is great in cocktails, served over ice with soda water or simply sipped straight.

Recently I was lamenting the lost fig trees of my childhood - oh, how I loved my grandmothers’ trees and their sweet summer fruit! – and the very next day, providence shined upon me, bringing me not figs, but free Mirabelle plums.

I had fixed some snacky food and packed a bottle of cold water in a small cooler so that my husband and I could explore this beautiful island we are blessed to have a home in. We had in mind a public picnic area on the east coast we had spotted last summer.

As we parked the car then gathered out belongings, I noticed that the ground was covered in little round jewels of varying hues from yellow to orange and red. I glanced up and there was a Mirabelle plum tree, covered in extra vines but full of fruit, much of it still green.

I filled a small bag with the bounty, practically giggling with glee. Who doesn’t love some free fruit?

With the first pound of plums, I made a delightful small batch of jam, just two jars. With the balance, I decided to make flavored vodka. 

Mirabelle Plum Vodka

If you don’t have little Mirabelles, you can use another variety of plums but I would recommend cutting them in half or quarters to infuse. I covered the plums plus a little extra with just over a cup of vodka. Depending on the jar you use, you may need a little more or even a little less. 

Ingredients
7 oz or 200g Mirabelle plums
8.45 fl. oz or 250ml vodka
3-4 tablespoons sugar (I used golden caster but everyday sugar will do.)
TIME

Method
Wash and dry the plums, making sure to discard any that are mushy. Put them in a jar with a tight seal then pour in the vodka to cover. 


Store in a cool, dark place for at least four weeks. Or longer, if you have the time. Mine infused for six weeks.  I put it in the window for the photos to make it easier to see the color change in the vodka.


Once your infusion time is up, add three tablespoons of the sugar to a mixing bowl. Strain the plums through a sieve on top of the sugar bowl so the vodka goes into the bowl. 


Gently press the plums just enough to make them split but do not mash them too hard. We don’t want bits in the vodka, just any vodka juice that may be inside the plums to drain out. 

Stir the vodka until the sugar has dissolved then taste it. Add a little more sugar, if desired. I added about half of the final tablespoon, so 3 1/2 tablespoons total.


Decant the Mirabelle plum vodka into a clean, sterilized bottle. My final volume was 11 oz or 325ml.

This makes a most delightfully refreshing drink, tart and not too sweet, to sip straight, or with ice and soda. 

Deliciously fruity, tart but not too sweet, this Mirabelle plum vodka is great in cocktails, served over ice with soda water or simply sipped straight.

Enjoy!

Welcome to the 22th edition of Alphabet Challenge 2025, brought to you by the letter V. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the V recipes below:





Pin this Mirabelle Plum Vodka!

Deliciously fruity, tart but not too sweet, this Mirabelle plum vodka is great in cocktails, served over ice with soda water or simply sipped straight.

.