Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Week 10: Limoncello


I came across this recipe in Cooking Light this year and thought it would make great Christmas gifts for friends. My boyfriend had tried limoncello with some Italian friends of his and we thought this would be a fun gift. Limoncello is an Italian liqueur that is good over ice, a lemon drop martini, mixed with sparkling wine, or could be splashed over fresh fruit. (I always add a little alcohol to my fruit salad, usually an orange flavored liqueur). This recipe could not be easier, getting the lemon rind off was the most work. I looked up some other recipes on the web and there were variations of how much time to let the limoncello sit, but 2 weeks worked for me. Also if you can use a peeler and just take off the yellow part of the lemon, it might give the liqueur less of a bite. I was amazed on the color the vodka took on. The lemon rinds were pale and almost white when they got done doing their magic. I found some nice bottles at the Container Store with a lid that holds pretty well. I also peeled a long lemon rind into the bottle for effect! I am putting together a gift basket for a friend with limoncello, two martini glasses, and a few martini recipes to use the limoncello. Nothing is better than a homemade gift for the holidays and nothing is more hillbilly than bootlegged limoncello! Enjoy!

Limoncello:

  • 4 cups vodka

  • ½ cup lemon rind strips (about 7 lemons)

  • 3 cups water

  • 1 ½ cups sugar


Special items needed: none, just time


Step 1: Combine vodka and rind in a glass bowl with a lid. Let stand at room temperature for 2 weeks.


Step 2: Strain through a sieve into a bowl; discard solids.


Step 3: Combine 3 cups water and 1 ½ cups sugar in a large saucepan. Cook over medium heat until the sugar dissolves, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat, and cool to room temperature. Add to vodka mixture.


Step 4: Divide limoncello evenly among 3 sterilized (750-milliliter) bottles, and seal.

Yield: 7 cups (serving size: about 1/4 cup) Store in the refrigerator up to 1 year.
Calories: 125 per serving.


Recipe credit to: Cooking Light, November 2008

1 comment:

Ben | Limoncelloquest.com said...

That's the first time I've seen the calories per serving listed. It's not as bad as I thought!