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This Homemade Apple Brandy has all sorts of adult holiday comfort in a bottle. Spice up your liquor cabinet with this fun and tasty apple drink.
We are starting to wind down our Apple Pie series and I want to get one more good punch of great apple pie flavor in with an Apple Brandy recipe. This Apple Brandy has all the flavors of apple pie and is a great way to sip on a bit of Christmas. In fact, that is the first thing my wife said when she tried it. “Ohh… that is like sipping on Christmas.” Incidentally, Christmas and Apple Pie share quite a few flavors. This recipe is really easy, a fun little project, and pays dividends in flavor. Enjoy this tasty Homemade Apple Brandy.
What Does This Have To Do With Apple Pie?
Look at the flavors. It shares so many tastes and flavors that go along with Apple Pie. Yes, it has apples. Surprised yet? We also add sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg. The first is sugar. Apple pie definitely has plenty of sugar. I mean, it is a dessert pie, right? Of course, we want a bit of sweetness with it. The other two ingredients, cinnamon, and nutmeg, are obvious bedfellows with apples and apple pie.
Then, we put booze in it. Ha! This apple pie flavor is perfect for a boozy, adult cocktail.
Don’t Boil The Brandy
We warm the ingredients of this drink, but boiling it can have some adverse side effects. If the liquid starts to boil, we are going to see the alcohol content change for the worse. We want to maintain the alcohol content and mix all the flavors together.
Instead of boiling, make sure everything combines at a nice warm temperature. This will make sure that all of the yummy flavors are infused while protecting the alcohol of our brandy.
How Should I Serve This Drink?
I have been drinking homemade apple brandy cold, but I think it would be a very nice warm drink as well. Just like many people enjoy warmed apple pie, these flavors can be very good as a heated up cocktail. If you are like me and enjoy the drink cold, I would store the container in the refrigerator and then serve it over some ice.
Where Should I Store The Apple Brandy?
We let all the flavors sit at room temperature, so I don’t know why it can’t be stored like that? If you want your apple brandy to start at a cold temperature, keep it in the fridge. This really is a tough drink, so don’t get too caught up in how to store it. I would say that you should use it up within a month or so of completing the recipe. But, that shouldn’t be that hard, right?
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Products Used in This Recipe
PrintHoliday Homemade Apple Brandy
- Prep Time: 1 Minutes
- Cook Time: 14 Minutes
- Total Time: 15 Minutes
- Yield: 1 Quart 1x
- Category: Cocktails
- Method: Warming
- Cuisine: European
Description
It is like sipping the holidays! This Homemade Apple Brandy is a flavorful spirit that really can get that holiday cheer going. Its apple pie flavor is divine and is a drink that can be served warm or cold. This Apple Brandy really is something special.
Ingredients
- 1 apple, cored
- 2 cup sugar
- 2 cups brandy
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
Instructions
- Add all ingredients to a pot.
- Warm on low and stir until sugar is melted
- Put into a covered container (I use a quart jar) and let sit at room temperature for one week.
- (optional) Remove apples after the one week is over and place into serving bottles. I tend to use mason jars for stuff, so I just keep it in there with the apples and drink it up.
Notes
If the end product is too thick for your liking either add more brandy (for a stronger drink) or water to taste.
Warm or cold, I think this would be wonderful! Perfect for a cold night, which will happen for the first time this weekend! Great for the holidays.
I don’t understand how you can get a quart by only putting 2 cups of brandy in with the apples and sugar. By my calculations you will end up with a pint not a quart. I can understand using the quart jar to begin with but after you remove the apple you will only have a pint of apple brandy. Am I missing something here?
2 cups of sugar + 2 cups of liquid does not equal two cups of liquid. Add in an apple – and noting that step 4 is optional… approximately a quart. That said, do what you need to do. We are just mixing some ingredients together and it doesn’t need to be rocket science. For baking? I would be a bit more exacting, but not on this.
I would think that the type of apple selected would have a lot to do with the final drink taste. Do have any suggestions on the apple type(s) that work out best?
Thanks