Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Accio Butterbeer!

Having paid a visit this past weekend to my own personal mecca, the Wizarding World of Harry Potter (WWoHP), I finally experienced butterbeer first hand. Butterbeer! Glooooooooooorious butterbeer! You encase me in a glass case of emotion.

I <3 butterbeer.  Cheers!
I need to abandon my original idea of creating butterbeer from actual beer. A beer base is simply too bitter for such a sweet drink. But substituting with Butterscotch Schnapps, perhaps?  Or maybe a lil' bit o' Captain (spiced rum) to a cream soda base?

Another tip from WWoHP: the foam is added separately. Thank god. No more revolting butter-cream soda reaction product. Also, the foam seems to hold most of the flavor in the drink as a whole.  I have some good ideas about how to accomplish this that I'll try out this weekend (involving whipping heavy cream, Cool Whip, and butterscotch/caramel syrup).

Until next time... cheerio, mates!


Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Peskipiksi Pesternomi!



Cornish Pixies are not for the faint of heart.

Or for the weak of stomach.

With grand designs to create a new batch of ever-improving butterbeer at least once a week, I entered this realm of co-authoring a cooking blog with my usual positive intentions.  Envisioning wild success, I knew we would soon have as much fame as Gilderoy Lockhart, (5 time winner of Witch Weekly's "Most Charming Smile Award") if not more.  Our sparkling faces would adorn every would-be-witch's computer screen each time they entered the kitchen.  Soon we would be honorary members of the Wizengamot...

wait, what?

Then the pressure kicked in.  What the heck are we doing?  Who are we to think that we can even begin to master these subtle culinary arts that have taken centuries to perfect?  Now I was starting to picture an endlessly spiraling disaster (much like trying to be an adult) that sooner or later would have us both curled up in a corner retching up slugs or in a state resembling petrificus totalus.  Shortly thereafter my stomach began to feel like I had swallowed a swarm of Cornish Pixies.  Devilish little blighters that they are, they started wreaking havoc on my insides, making the very concept of taste testing a creatively brewed batch of butterbeer sound absolutely repulsive.  My horrible nightmare started to become a self-fulfilling prophecy as I sat on the couch and stared dejectedly at my counter full of ingredients.

Then I started craving a butterbeer.  Tonight, the journey beings anew.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Channeling Neville Longbottom

When we first started this blog, I had visions of executing recipes with ease like Hermione cleverly mastering a new charm. UM, yeah. Not so much. After this weekend, I've demoted myself to Neville in potions class. (Yeah, yeah. If brains were gold, I'd be poorer than Weasley. WE GET IT, MALFOY.)

I decided to tackle two kinds of butterbeer - a traditional Tudor version, and the chilled (not frozen) version served at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter (WWoHP). Neither turned out well.

Traditional Tudor Buttered Beere

Before it was the drink du jour of angsty teenage wizards flirting at the Three Broomsticks, butterbeer was "Buttered Beere." Never one to play coy, the Brits pretty much gave it away in the name - beer with butter (plus sugar and spice and everything nice.) I modified this recipe for one can of beer since I didn't want to make a big batch.

Cast of Characters
 1 can (440mL) British ale
2 egg yolks
1/2 cup brown sugar
2.5 tbsp butter, diced
Pinch of nutmeg, ground cloves, and ground ginger

Separate the yolks from the whites into a medium bowl. Pour in sugar and beat until light and creamy. Set aside.

This is a crappy pic. I need to learn food photography.

"Old Speckled Hen" sounds like something a homeless bum might swig out of a paper bag, but Jody assured me it's a tasty classic British ale. Pour the ale into a saucepan and gently bring to a boil. (It boils quickly so watch the pan closely.)
 

When it's boiling, toss in a pinch each of ground cloves, ground ginger, and nutmeg. Whisk briskly. Turn down heat and let simmer for a few minutes. (Don't simmer too long or risk burning off the alcohol. 2 minutes is good enough.)

IMPORTANT: temper the egg mixture with the beer mixture, then pour the tempered egg mixture into the saucepan.  Otherwise, you'll end up with scrambled eggs in your beer. GROSS. Whisk briskly. Simmer for 3 more minutes. Remove from heat and whisk in butter until it melts. Pour into a mug and convince a test subject to drink it.

 

THE VERDICT: A tad too spicy and definitely not enough sweetness. Smaller, more judicious pinches next time and more sugar. I used 1/3 cup but I modified the recipe above to include 1/2 cup sugar. I might even try to substitute butterscotch sauce for the sugar next time.

You could also mix the butterbeer with equal parts cream and milk after it cooled, but I was so dissatisfied with how the overall butterbeer turned out that I didn't even bother. Next time.

Chilled Butterbeer from WWoHP

This basically involved stirring butterscotch into cream soda. Instead of buying butterscotch, I wanted to make it from scratch. I followed this recipe from The Washington Post.

Cast of Characters - ignore the vinegar. I changed recipes after taking this photo.
4 tbsp unsalted butter
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 tbsp vanilla extract
Pinch of salt

Melt butter into a saucepan over medium heat. Add sugar, salt, and cream. Whisk, whisk, whisk. Bring to gentle boil and cook for 5 minutes. Stir here. Stir there. No need to stir everywhere.


Remove from heat and stir in vanilla. Ladle some (about 1") into the bottom of a mug. Pour in a bottle of cold cream soda. Stir and drink.
 

THE VERDICT: Sweet but not overly so. About what I would expect butterbeer to taste like (never actually having tasted it before. Yet. Soon.)  BUT OMFG THE FOAM IS REVOLTING. It's like the butter separated from the butterscotch and weirdly reacted with the cream soda to give a gross texture kind of like...foaming bogeys. Like an aerated form of how Crabbe and Goyle would taste in Polyjuice form. DISGUSTING.

Maybe I should have let the butterscotch cool?  Maybe I used too much butter in the butterscotch?  Maybe Smuckers makes better butterscotch sauce than I do and I should fork over the $4.29 to buy it at the Giant? Whatever the reason, this foam issue needs to be resolved. 

Meanwhile, I need to channel the Half-Blood Prince more than Neville Longbottom. Quick, someone find me a used potions book in the back cupboard!


Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Like LESS sickly butterscotch...

During a recent journey to the wizarding world, I found myself utterly addicted to the frozen variety of our favorite sweet sensation.  So it only seemed fitting that frozen butterbeer would be my first attempted recreation.

Being that I'm about as creative in the kitchen as Tonks is graceful, I wasn't entirely sure where to start.  So, I looked up as many recipes as I could find and started buying ingredients.  I came out with so much stuff I started to feel like maybe I should have taken home-ec in high school. Or better yet, potions.


Cast of characters.  A whisk is not an ingredient, but it made for a cute picture.

Seeing as I lacked the ingredients (or know how) to start myself off with some Felix Felicis, I settled on the motley crew shown above.  Many recipes I found call for butterscotch syrup in the form that you may put it on top of ice cream.  For my part, I wanted the liquid part of my beverage to be slightly less sticky.

I started out by trying to recreate the scrumptious foam layer of the butter beer and adapted a recipe that had potential from Chica and Jo.  While their's called for just heavy cream and powdered sugar, I felt like it should have a little more emphasis on the buttery notes. What I remember best from my wizardly visit is the wonderful symphony of buttery and sugary flavors that was created when the foam and the drink combined, but I am unconvinced that the butter belongs in the liquid/ice part itself.  So, I added a tablespoon of butter, 2 extra tablespoons of powdered sugar, and a teaspoon of butterscotch syrup (the intended-for-beverages kind shown above) to their already pretty good invention.

Oh yes, I almost forgot to mention, I melted the butter first.

When I decided that I had played enough with the foam, my magical refrigerator dispensed some crushed ice (Mr. Weasly would be proud) and I poured in about 3/4 a glass of cream soda.  I chose to use a local variety, Teddy's, that I'm currently quite in love with.  For the frozen version of this drink, I think it's important that whichever cream soda is used, it be highly carbonated.  This helps the drink to have a nice warmth going down, which always makes me happy.  Then I got crazy and added a table spoon of butterscotch syrup.  And a tablespoon of shortbread syrup.  And a tablespoon of caramel syrup.  Zonko's won't know what hit them.

Finally, I shook up my foam mixture in a squeeze bottle (Which had far too small a hole for easy handling.  Must get a new one.  Where's my remembrall?) I poured it on top of my cream soda, and the beautiful substance above appeared.  Butterbeer!

The verdict?

Well, I'm not quite there yet.  My overzealous sweet tooth got more than a little carried away and the drink with all of those sugary syrups was probably more than a little on the sickly sweet side of things.  The crushed ice was not nearly crushed enough (that's what I get for leaving magic to muggle technology) and the foam was a little too thin. 

So, while Madame Rosmerta doesn't have anything to worry about just yet, I do think that I'm on the right track.  In the meantime, I just need to figure out how to conjure some snow...

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Got Butterbeer?

Butterbeer, the drink of choice for young Hogwarts witches and wizards (and helping house elves dance since 1485!) An amber flagon of deliciousness that is equal parts candy-coated butterscotch bubbles and shortbread biscuit, topped with velvet creamy foam and just a hint of magic.  Served chilled or frozen. YUM. Who wouldn't want to drink this all the time? Not us!

There’s no such thing as too much butterbeer! *clink*

But how do those in the Muggle world partake of the mouthwatering beverage without making the journey to the wizarding realm? (We hear Apparating is an unpleasant business. Feeling like you're being forced through a tight rubber tube? Eh, no thanks.) Can this delightful drink be concocted here at home? It is our mission to find out!

And not just butterbeer - Pumpkin juice! Treacle tart! Hagrid's rock cakes! Madam Rosmerta's mead! Seriously, we get hungry every time we read HP 1-7. And so, from Sorcerer's Stone to Deathly Hallows, we are going to try (operative word: try) and recreate these wonderful wizarding recipes in the Muggle world!

So come one, come all - join us on our epic journey through the culinary masterpieces of Harry Potter's Wizarding World! In the wise words of Professor Dumbledore, "Let us step out into the night and pursue that flighty temptress, adventure!"

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