Cooking with spirits

Try these tempting recipes using wine and spirits.


Remember that some alcohol is always left in a dish after cooking, whether it's in flambéed bananas or a slow-simmered stew. Even if you flambé a Christmas pudding, you only burn off 20 per cent of the spirit before the flames die. Consider this while enjoying second helpings!

Try these:

Pineapple flambé


A quick but delicious way of serving fruit is to briefly fry it in a little butter, before adding orange juice and muscovado sugar followed by rum, which is set alight to burn off some of its alcohol. Pineapple tastes particularly good if you add a few vanilla seeds.

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Grilled polenta with mushrooms and herbs


Here, a splash of dry white wine in the buttery mushroom sauce cuts both the richness of the Gruyère-flavoured grilled polenta and the intense-tasting sautéed shiitake, oyster and brown cap mushrooms. Bear in mind that the more the wine is reduced, the more acidic it will taste.

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Mulled wine with spicy cheese scones


The aromatic spiciness of cloves, mace, allspice, cinnamon, cardamom, lemon and orange zest make this mulled wine a truly heart-warming drink. These savoury cheese, cayenne and caraway mini-scones make a satisfying accompaniment

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Venison daube


Traditionally, wild venison is marinated in wine to tenderise it. Today, farmed venison does not need tenderisation, but a wine and vegetable marinade can add another layer of flavour to a casserole. Here, the marinated meat is gently simmered with bacon, orange zest, carrots, onions and celery.

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Seared chicken breasts with celery and grapes


Crisp, golden-fried chicken breasts are served here on mashed potato and chicory and with a luscious grape, shallot and celery sauce, made with a dessert wine boiled down to a syrupy consistency, a reduced chicken stock, and cream. Flavour it with lemon juice and chives to taste.

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Cinnamon créme caramel with clementine salad


One of the easiest ways to give fresh fruit a lift is to season it with a complementary spirit. Here, sliced clementines are mixed in some Cointreau and served with a delicate créme caramel that has been flavoured with clementine zest and cinnamon.

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Read Sybil Kapoor's full article




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