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Schladerer Cocktail Book I English Version I made by Small Big Brands

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Fam. Schladerer for

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Fruit Brandies and Fruit Spirits – Their place in your Bar

Flowering cherry tree

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Content

Foreword by Philipp Schladerer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

A brief history of fruit brandy cocktails . . . . . . . . . . 8

The history of Schladerer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Markgräfler cherry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Red Williams pear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Wild sloe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

Black Forest cherry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Mirabelle plum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Wild raspberry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

Plum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

Williams pear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

Apple and Pear Brandy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56

Homemade recipes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64

Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70

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Foreword

For me, a good bar is a place that engages all your senses, whether it be in the company of good friends or in a solitary setting with only one’s thoughts. This calls for a fitting drink that authentically reflects the love and professionalism with which it has been prepared. Fruit brandy is one of the most authentic spirits in existence. It combines old traditions and a strong affinity towards nature. Care-fully selected fruits and expert manipulation are the foundation of good fruit brandy. My staff and I embody this combination every single day, as our company has done for more than 170 years and six generations.

With this book, I would like to demonstrate that the classic fruit brandy generates as much enthusiasm in the rustic bar as in today’s modern bar culture. After all, what could be nobler than combining the art of distilling fruit spirits with masterful drinks for the ultimate enjoyment of our guests?

Cheers,

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A Brief History of Fruit BrandyCocktails

by Anistatia Miller & Jared Brown

Although the world first encountered fruit brandy thanks to French alchemist Arnaud de Villeneuve in the 1200s, giving birth to grape-based spirits such as armagnac and brandy it took some time for fruit brandy to become an essential element in mixed drinks and especially cocktails. Pure distillates ranging from fruit and grain to sugar beet and sugar cane, eaux-de-vie have always been at fore-front of mixology. But let’s focus our attention on spirits made from morello cherries, pears, raspberries.

Fruit brandies made an early appearance in the story of the cock-tail. The story begins in the United States during the 1800s when German bartenders and bar owners made their way to America. Bringing their beer garden traditions as well as their talent for making long and short drinks to an audience that already knew the essentials ingredients used in these new recipes. Kirschwasser, Himbeergeist, and other fruit eaux-de-vie joined the roster along with gin, rum, whiskey, and brandy to create this new repertoire that had taken the western hemisphere by storm.

William Terrington’s 1869 Cooling Cups & Dainty Drinks prescribed Kirschwasser for classic British wine cups, blended with claret or Rhenish wines, spices, and sometimes sparkling water. Punches were another place that barmen Jerry Thomas, Harry Johnson, and others combined fruit brandy with gin or whisky and champagne to brighten the occasion.

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Fruit brandies were an essential component in pousse café and Brandy Champerelle: drinks that layered liqueurs and fruit bran-dies in a specific order based on gravitational density. Mazagrans were another place that fruit brandies were commonly included in the formula. Coffee plus a fruit brandy with a nominal amount of sweetening made their way across all of Europe: their popularity centered on the Mediterranean, but found its way to the Caribbean, central and northern Europe, even to central and south Americas.

Kirs chwass er was also offered

as an alternative to using cognac or

brandy when blend-ing ratafias and liqueurs

by “The Only William”, barman Willy Schmidt in his 1891 book The Flowing Bowl: When and What to Drink.

It was during the European Golden Age of Cocktails (1920s through 1950s) that Kirschwasser found itself a new role as a cock-tail ingredient. In the 1936 Italian cocktail tome Mille Misture, a 1922 version of the Dempsey Cocktail called for Kirschwasser and Vermouth di Torino in a 50/50 mix with a dash of bitters. William J Tarling’s 1937 compendium Café Royal Cocktail Book presented dozens of uses for fruit brandies shaken and stirred by members of the United Kingdom Bartenders’ Guild.

The Cuban Golden Age of Cocktails during that same period also served up a few gems including a Mazagran variation called a Black Jack that was simply equal parts cold coffee, brandy, and Kirschwasser shaken with a lemon twist and a touch of sugar.

Kirschwasser was offered as an alternative

Fascination in fruit brandies did not cease as the Cocktail Revival of the 1990s led us to today’s new and daring mixing heights. Mixologists such as Jacques Bezuidenhuit has experimented with pairing single malt scotch with poire william eau-de-vie accentuated with nutmeg, close, and cinnamon. Revisited recipes such as The Rose – a soft, elegant apéritif combining Kirschwasser, cherry brandy liqueur, and dry vermouth – are also making appearances on menus around the world. Now it’s time to contribute a new chapter to the history of these classic spirits.

Kirschwasser 1932

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The Historyof Schladerer

How do you start a story that spansmore than two centuries? Perhaps the best way is to capture and ex-press the spirit of the story particu-larly well – in both senses of the word. The famous Schladerer bottle contains the spirit of the very best fruit along with the spirit of the eponymous family so well known for its popular Fruit Brandy specialities. It also embodies the enthusiasm for pristine nature, carefully selected fruit, solid craftsmanship and the highest possible quality.

This story actually starts in Bamlach on the upper Rhine, near Switzer-land: this is where Sixtus Balthasar Schladerer was born in 1790. By 1813, he had begun experimenting with the art of distilling fruit brandy in his family home. In 1844, his son Sixtus moved to Staufen im Breisgau, married the innkeeper’s daughter of the inn at the crossroads and took over the restaurant.

Sixtus Balthasar Schladerer in his distillery, 1813.

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Alfred Schladerer, Nicolaus Schladerer, Philipp SchladererSixtus Balthasar Schladerer, Sixtus Schladerer, Hermann Schladerer

home distillery. As a skilled restaurateur with training in France and England, the “marketing pioneer” knew how to help his products gain wide public recognition, not least through the development of a square bottle, patented in 1932. When he died prematurely in 1956, his wife Greta Schladerer took over. She helped the brand acquire international recognition. After Greta, her adopted son, Nicolaus Schladerer, became Managing Director in 1980. With charisma, commitment and a keen sense for high quality, he cemented the reputation and the success of the brand until his death in 2004. Subsequently, Heinrich Ulmann, a co-shareholder and cousin to Nicolaus Schladerer who was active in management, became solely responsible for the family-owned company.

Today, Philipp Schladerer represents the sixth generation of the family and has been Managing Director since 2010. Philipp, son of Nicolaus Schladerer, feels that the love for local nature and its fruits and the passion for the art of distilling fruit brandy were instilled in him from childhood. His ambition is to preserve traditional values while attending to modern needs in order to lead the company to an equally successful and sustainable future.

A post station was located in the adjacent building, from which the later name of “Kreuz-Post (cross post)” was derived, and which to this day accounts for the post horn on the Schladerer coat of arms. Like his father, Sixtus also harboured a passion for the distilling of fruit brandy: with his brandies, he knew how to entertain his guests. In 1876, Sixtus’ son Hermann Schladerer took over the inn whose reputation reached far beyond the region, to-gether with the attached farmland, vineyard and distillery. At the same time, he continued to refine the art of distilling fruit brandy, so that his “Chriesiwässerli” became an acclaimed house drink.

The next generation firmly connected the name Schladerer with fruit brandy: Hermann’s son Alfred continued the family business and, in 1919, devoted himself completely to the expansion of the

From simple peasant schnaps to an international brand

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5. Partly multi-annual storage and maturation of high-proof spirits in ventilated stainless steel tanks, earthenware jugs or ash wood barrels

6. Analysis by independent specialists

7. Lowering to drinking strength + cold filtration

8. Bottling

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The Production Process

Explanations1. Maturing and harvesting of mature fruit in exceptional growing areas

2. Delivery, quality control of the fruit, sorting the fruit by hand

3. Mashing and controlled fermentation / maceration of low-sugar fruits

4. Distillation of the brandies and spirits by experienced master distillers

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Pip FruitThe fruits of the rose family are known as pip fruits. These include apples, pears, quince, medlar and mountain ash among others. Most of the pip fruit species are located in the temperate regions of Central Europe, where their cultivation has a long tradition. Apples and pears have been cultivated in Europe for over 2,000 years.

Soft FruitsSoft fruits are understood as fruits that have the following properties in common: They are usually soft, small, and roundish. The genus Fragaria (strawberry) and Rubus (raspberry, blackberry) are asso-ciated with the more comprehensive Rosaceae family.

Differences to small distilleriesThese are not industrially manufactured products, but rather old, manmade crafts with new technical enhancements.

A centrifuge is used for processing some fruits such as mirabelles. This separates the flesh completely from stalk and seeds in order to obtain the purest possible fruit aroma—a technique that is often in-accessible to small distilleries.

The controlled cooling of the mash during the fermentation process, which helps to maintain the fine aromas in Williams pears during fermentation and distillation, is equally sophisticated and expensive.

Production Glossary

Genuine Fruit BrandyA true fruit brandy must include at least 37.5% alcohol by vol. and be made solely from the distillate of fruit and generated fruit fla-vours. It may not be flavoured, nor is the addition of neutral alcohol permitted after distillation. In a fruit brandy, the addition of 10 g of sugar per litre in Germany and 20 g of sugar per litre in France and Italy is legally allowed. Sugar enhances the flavour of fruit brandy and can even cover small deficiencies. Schladerer manufactures only real fruit brandies and strictly rejects the addition of sugar.

Obstgeist (Fruit Spirit)The point of difference here is the manufacturing process. Obstgeist may only be distilled from low-sugar fruits, which are precisely defined in the EU regulation on spirit drinks. The fruits are inserted in ethyl alcohol of agricultural origin, which extracts the aromas (maceration or cold extract method). The mixing ratio of fruit to alcohol is not precisely defined (this is a trade secret), but must be at least 20 liter of alcohol to 100 kg of fruit.

Stone FruitThe term stone fruit refers to plant species, the fruits of which form drupes. The inner part of the pericarp is lignified, while the exterior is meaty and juicy. Stone fruits include cherries, apricots, nectarines, plums and mirabelles.

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Markgrafler Chriesiwasserli Markgräfler Cherry Brandy

Only the best sweet cherries from the orchards of the Markgräflerland region go into this brandy. The restrained, temperature-controlled fermentation with cherry stones serves the preservation of fine-fruity distinctive aromas. A maturation period of at least five years, mainly in ash barrels, enables a very fine aroma development.

Precise cherry fruit and well integrated bitter almond flavours are found in the Chriesiwässerli. The cherry note is strong and longlasting, the brandy soft and supple.

Markgrafler cherry

The Markgräflerland produces the highest quality cherries.

“Chriesi” is the local name for the cherry. The name reflects the close proximity to Switzerland.

The local cherry blossom is a real sight to behold. A specifically set up “blossom telephone” informs of the onset of flowering.

Warm winds flow through the Belfort gap, a valley between the Jura and

the Vosges mountains, in the upper Rhine Valley. The warm breeze

ensures that spring begins 3 weeks earlier in the Markgräflerland.

This extremely favourable climate, the heavy loesscontaining soil and

its protected location make the Eggenertal Valley ideal for cherry

cultivation.

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Santa Marta reverseShake

Cocktail glassNo ice

40 ml Markgräfler Chriesiwässerli No garnish20 ml White Overproof Rum25 ml Lime juice 2 bs Fine granulated sugar

Place all the ingredients in the shaker and stir until the sugardissolves. Fill the shaker with ice cubes and crushed ice and shakevigorously. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass.

Baden RevolutionStir

Cocktail glassNo ice

30 ml Markgräfler Chriesiwässerli Lemon zest30 ml Bourbon20 ml Belsazar Dry Vermouth10 ml Belsazar Red Vermouth 5 ml Sugar syrup 1 ds Angostura

Add all ingredients to stirring glass, fill up with ice cubes and stir until cold. Strain into chilled cocktail glass and add a lemon zest.

Prince of Staufen Build

Julep cup Crushed ice

Lemon zest and30 ml Markgräfler Chriesiwässerli cocktail cherry20 ml Cognac10 ml Grand Marnier 1 ds AngosturaTop up Quality sparkling wine

Fill the cup with crushed ice, Chriesiwässerli, cognac, Grand Marnier, add Angostura and stir well. Top with quality sparkling wine, add lemon zest and cocktail cherry. Serve with a Julep strainer.

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Rote WilliamsbirneRed Williams Pear Brandy

For such a special brandy, the fruits are hand-picked and subjected to a gentle fermentation without stalk and seeds in order to capture the delicate aroma of the fruit. A controlled cooling of the mash during fermentation is extremely important so as to preserve the fine aromas during fermentation and distillation. The distillate matures in earthenware vessels. Only in this way can the unique, distinctive, fruity aroma of the brandy be preserved.

The brandy made from the Red Williams pear has the intense scent of ripe, spicy pears.

The pears are planted at higher altitudeso that they are not exposed to blazing heat and mature more slowly, which givesthem more time to develop their flavour.

Red Williams pear

The red Williams pear is a rare fruit. Its aroma is spicier

than that of the yellow Williams

pear. It is mainly grown in the Rhone valley. The period of maturation between

flowering and harvest is approximately

5 months.

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Pear CollinsShake

Collins glassCubes

Lemon, pear60 ml Rote Williamsbirne and cocktail cherry30 ml Lemon juice30 ml Sugar syrup50 ml Soda water

Shake Rote Williamsbirne, lemon juice and sugar syrup on ice. Strain into Collins glass over fresh ice cubes and fill with soda water. Garnish with lemon and pear slices and a cocktail cherry.

Breisgau ManhattanStir

Cocktail glass No ice

60 ml Rote Williamsbirne Orange zest15 ml Belsazar Red Vermouth15 ml Belsazar Rosé Vermouth 1 ds Orange Bitters

Add all ingredients to stirring glass, fill up with ice cubes and stir until cold. Strain into chilled cocktail glass and add an orange zest.

Birnini Shake

Cocktail glassNo ice

60 ml Rote Williamsbirne Slice of pear30 ml Belsazar White Vermouth10 ml Sugar syrup1/2 Pear, sliced

Muddle pear with bar pestle in shaker together with other ingre-dients. Add ice cubes and shake vigorously. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass, garnish with pear slices.

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WildschleheWild Sloe Brandy (Fruit Spirit)

The wild sloes from the Carpathian Mountains are harvested by hand, after the first frost, when the fruits reach their flavour peak. The distillate matures in earthenware vessels for at least two years.

Striking in its fragrance and full-bodied character, yet soft in its aroma, the wild sloe boasts a characteristic bitter almond note, earthy flavours, hints of smoke and peat, and a very subtle saltiness.

The green, prickly sloe grows as a shrub or as a small, often multi-stemmed tree. It can live up to 40 years.

Part of the bitter tasting and astringent tannins in the fruit is broken down enzymatically by frost.

Sloe is a stonefruit, and is part of

the Rosaceousfamily.

In order to obtain the unmistakable aroma

of bitter almonds, the sloes are distilled with

their stones.Blackthorn

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Prunus spinosa saccharumShake

Cocktail glassNo ice

60 ml Wildschlehe Lemon zest2 1/2 bs Oleo Saccharum (see homemade recipes)20 ml Lemon juice 2 Raspberries

Add Oleo Saccharum, lemon juice and Wildschlehe to shaker and stir until Oleo Saccharum is dissolved. Add raspberries, ice cubes and crushed ice and shake vigorously. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with lemon zest.

The MixtureBuild

Highball glassCrushed ice

20 ml Wildschlehe Cocktail cherry20 ml Rote Williamsbirne20 ml Markgräfler Chriesiwässerli25 ml Lemon juice25 ml Honey water (see homemade recipes) 1 ds Angostura

Fill the glass with crushed ice, add the ingredients and stir well.Re-fill with crushed ice and garnish with a cocktail cherry.

Huckleberry FinnShake

White wine glassCubes

50 ml Wildschlehe Fresh berries20 ml Sugar syrup 1 bs Clear vinegar 5 %10–15 Blueberries Top up Quality sparkling wine

Muddle blueberries with bar pestle in shaker, add all ingredients except sparkling wine. Add ice cubes and shake vigorously. Together with other ingredients. Top up with quality sparkling wine and garnish with fresh berries.

Works with anykind of berry.

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Schwarzwalder KirschwasserBlack Forest Cherry Brandy

The sweet cherries for this brandy are grown in the foothills of the Black Forest at altitudes of 200-300 m. The Southwest-facing slopes offer protection from cold easterly winds, and the slight alti-tude prevents excessive heating of fruits during the ripening period from May to July. In order to achieve the specific taste of bitter almonds, the cherries are distilled with their stones.

The Schwarzwälder Kirschwasser is powerful, full-bodied, smooth and round in taste. The fruit is long-lasting and is complemented by a bitter almond note.

Black Forest cherry

The small, black cherries can only be harvested when the amount of comprised sugar reaches its peak. The period for the harvest is only four weeks long. Main varieties are Dollenseppler, Schwarze Schüttler and Benjaminler.

Brandy cherries have a large stone. You need approximately 8 kg of cherries for 1 Bottle ofSchwarzwälder Kirschwasser.

A cherry tree can live up to 150 years. Our oldest cherry supplier has been supplying us with cherries for 50 years.

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Whats RyeStir

Cocktail glassNo ice

40 ml Schwarzwälder Kirschwasser Lemon zest40 ml Rye whiskey20 ml Belsazar Rosé Vermouth

Stir the ingredients on ice and strain into a chilled cocktail glass.Garnish with lemon zest.

Cherry BuckBuild

Red wine glassCubes

Apples, cherries, 40 ml Schwarzwälder Kirschwasser mint, cucumber 10 ml Lemon juice120 ml Ginger ale

Fill the red wine glass with ice, add the ingredients, mix carefully. Garnish with apple slices, cherries, mint and cucumber.

Black Forest Cherry Cake Shake

Cocktail glassNo ice

30 ml Schwarzwälder Kirschwasser Chocolate shavings20 ml Cherry liqueur20 ml Crème de Cacao white30 ml Cream

Shake the Kirschwasser, liqueur and Crème de Cacao on ice cubes long and vigorously, then strain into the glass. Shake the cold cream on ice in the shaker until thickened. Pour gently onto the drink, garnish with chocolate shavings.

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MirabellMirabelle Plum Brandy

Our mirabelles come from the Markgräflerland and neighbour-ing Lorraine. The fruits are usually grown at altitudes below the brandy cherries because their early fruit bloom is more sensitive to frost. In order to develop the flavour, the single maceration and the initial stage of fermentation include the stones. During the final stage of fermentation, these are removed to avoid excessive bitterness.

The Mirabelle Plum Brandy is unmistakable and aromatic, from beginning to end, and the ripe fruit flavours are unique and easy to discern.

Mirabelle plum

The ripening of the mirabelle from the blossom in April up to the harvest in September takes twice as long as for the cherry.

The mirabelle has beengrown in France since the

15th century. The names ofthe best-known varieties are

Metzer Mirabelle (yellow)and Mirabelle of Nancy

(yellow-red).

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MironiBuild

TumblerCubes

40 ml Mirabell Orange zest25 ml Aperol25 ml Belsazar Rosé Vermouth

Place the ingredients in the glass, fill with ice cubes and stir for about 1 minute. Garnish with an orange zest.

Breisgau CoolerBuild

Highball glassCubes

40 ml Mirabell 2 Orange segments120 ml Ginger ale 2 Orange segments

Fill the highball glass with ice and add the Mirabell. Squeeze two orange segments into the glass, allow to settle, and top up the highball with ginger ale.

Le Fleur Build

TumblerCrushed ice

50 ml Mirabell Lemon slice10 ml Vanilla liqueur15 ml Sugar syrup25 ml Lemon juice 8 Seedless green grapes

Muddle grapes in the tumbler with a bar pestle. Fill the glass with crushed ice, add the remaining ingredients and mix well. Re-fill with crushed ice and garnish with a lemon slice.

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Wald HimbeergeistWild Raspberry Brandy (Fruit Spirit)

These tiny, aromatic fruits from the high altitudes of the Carpathian Mountains are harvested by hand, immediately chilled (but not frozen) and transported in this condition to Staufen within 2 days. Due to soil conditions, climate and the ratio of flesh to sugar, the unique aroma of this wild raspberry and its taste make the long journey worthwhile. During the maceration, in order to preserve the flavour intensity, as little neutral alcohol as possible is added.

The raspberry flavour is clearly defined, intensely aromatic and longlasting.

Wild raspberry

The fruits grow wild in forest clearings and are all hand-picked.

Wild raspberries are a small, highly aromatic fruit and are only half the size of ordinary garden variety raspberries.

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Raspberry SmashShake

Goblet glassCrushed ice

50 ml Wald Himbeergeist Sprig of mint, raspberries30 ml Dry white wine20 ml Sugar syrup 6 leaves Mint1/2 Lemon, in wedges

Bruise mint leaves and lemon gently with bar pestle. Add remain-ing ingredients and ice cubes and shake vigorously. Doublestrain over crushed ice. Garnish with a sprig of mint and a lemon wedge.

Raspberry MojitoBuild

Highball glassCrushed ice

60 ml Wald Himbeergeist Sprig of mint, raspberries 2 bs White cane sugar20 ml Lime juice 6–8 Raspberries10 leaves MintTop up Lemonade

Muddle raspberries with sugar, then add mint and gently bruise it. Add remaining ingredients, top up with crushed ice and stir well. Garnish with two mint leafs.

Raspberry MuleBuild

Highball glassCubes

40 ml Wald Himbeergeist Wedge of lime 10 ml Lime juice120 ml Ginger beer

Fill the Highball glass with ice and and add Wald Himbeergeist.Squeeze the wedge of lime into the glass, allow to settle, andtop up the highball with ginger beer.

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ZwetschgenwasserPlum Brandy

The local quetsch plum from Baden is a sweet and sour, spicy and fine-tasting plum that grows in the Rhine Valley as well as at altitudes of up to 800 m. When correctly handled, the fruits produce a tasty and harmonious distillate. As in the case of the mirabelle, the maceration and the initial stage of fermentation are carried out with the stones. The final stage of fermentation excludes the stones to avoid excess bitterness that would affect the aroma.

The plum takes a decidedly central position and is bolstered by other flavours. It is fruity with a tart spiciness.

Plum

The local quetsch plum from Baden

is one of the few blue fruits, and

it is a subspecies of the plum.

Despite its sweet and sour taste, it is

almost as rich in sugar as the cherry.

The plum is mainly cultivated in the Rhine Valley and orchards of the Swabian Alps. These are old trees, so there are no trellis systems.

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DatschiShake

Cocktail glassNo ice

60 ml Zwetschgenwasser Crumble cake25 ml Demerara syrup (see homemade recipes) 20 ml Melted butter 1–2 Ripe plums

Stone plums, cut in pieces and muddle in shaker using bar pestle. Add remaining ingredients, fill up with ice cubes and shake vigorously. Doublestrain into cocktail glass and garnish with small piece of crumble cake.

Staufen FizzShake

Highball glassCubes

40 ml Zwetschgenwasser Lemon zest20 ml Belsazar Red Vermouth20 ml Sugar syrup30 ml Lemon juice30 ml Egg white 1 ds Orange BittersTop up Soda water

Place all of the ingredients on ice cubes and shake vigorously,strain into the glass and slowly pour the soda. Garnish withlemon zest.

Plum JulepBuild

Julep cup Crushed ice

30 ml Zwetschgenwasser Sprig of mint30 ml Bourbon15 ml Sugar syrup10 leaves Mint

Add all ingredients to the glass, fill up with crushed ice and stir well. Refill with crushed ice, garnish with sprigs of mint and serve with julep strainer.

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Williams-BirneWilliams Pear Brandy

Our pears come from our local region as well as from France and Italy. The valley basins of the Markgräflerland region offer favourable conditions similar to those of the valleys in the Alps. The pears are grown at altitudes of 300-800 m and harvested while still firm. They are stored in the distillery for another 2 to 3 weeks until they reach perfect maturity. To preserve the delicate aroma, the stems, cores and blossom appendages are removed with a centrifuge.

The Williams Pear Brandy is very intense and fruit-driven. The first mild taste spreads significantly and evolves into a spicy, ripe pear flavour.

Williams pear

The stems, cores,and blossom appendages mustbe removed before processing.

They interfere with the delicatearoma.

At higher altitudes, pears ripen more slowly and thereby develop a better flavour.

Even after picking, pears continue toripen and become more intense in taste.

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DewyShake

White wine glassCubes

30 ml Williams-Birne Pear slices30 ml Belsazar Rosé Vermouth20 ml Sugar syrup20 ml Lemon juiceTop up Quality sparkling wine

Shake all ingredients on ice except for sparkling wine and strain into glass with ice cubes. Top up with quality sparkling wine and garnish with fine pear slices.

Williams SourShake

TumblerCubes

60 ml Williams-Birne No garnish20 ml Sugar syrup30 ml Lemon juice30 ml Egg white

Shake all the ingredients on ice, then vigorously shake without ice and strain into a tumbler filled with ice cubes.

Pear GimletBuild

TumblerCubes

30 ml Williams-Birne Pear slices30 ml Vodka25 ml Roses Lime Cordial 5 ml Lime juice

Place all ingredients in the glass, fill with ice cubes and stir forabout 15 seconds. Fill with fresh ice cubes and garnish with a pear slice.

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ObstwasserApple and Pear Brandy

Only selected quality fruit from the Markgräflerland, the Black Forest and Lake Constance region go into this distillate. When our balanced ratio of apples and pears is artfully distilled, the result is a classic, fruity and striking Obstwasser.

The apple and pear flavours are immediately present in the mouth; the Obstwasser is down-to-earth and clear in character. The brandy spreads freshness and fruitiness on the palate.

Apples and pears

Apples and pears are used for Obstwasser.

The pear proportion is below 50 percent. Pears were originally added to reduce the acidity.

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Fields of GoldShake

Highball glassCubes

60 ml Obstwasser Mini hay bales30 ml Hay syrup (see homemade recipes)30 ml Lemon juiceTop up Soda water

Shake Obstwasser, hay syrup and lemon juice with ice. Strain into the highball glass on ice and fill with soda water.

Cross-CountryBuild

TumblerCrushed ice

50 ml Obstwasser No garnish20 ml Sugar syrup20 ml Pear puree20 ml Unfiltered apple juice1/4 Lemon, in wedges1/4 Orange, in wedges

Place lemon and orange wedges in the glass and muddle with bar pestle. Add remaining ingredients and crushed ice and stir well. Top up glass with crushed ice.

Fruit SpritzerBuild

Highball glassCubes

40 ml Obstwasser Apple and pear slices80 ml Rhubarb juice40 ml Soda water

Fill the glass with ice cubes, add Obstwasser, rhubarb juice andsoda water and stir gently. Fill with ice if necessary, garnish withapple and pear slices.

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Cocktail cherries

2 kg Fresh sour cherries with stems250 ml Sugar syrup250 ml Schladerer Schwarzwälder Kirschwasser 50 ml Schladerer Maraschino-Liqueur250 ml Bourbon1/2 bs Ascorbic acid 2 Cinnamon sticks 1 Vanilla pod 5 Cloves

Thoroughly wash the cherries. Add all liquid ingredients and spices in a saucepan and bring to a boil, then add the cherries and remove the pan from the heat. Let sit for 5 minutes. Place the cherries and liquid in a large, clean, air-tight jar, seal it and let cherries steep for at least one week.

Due to the high alcoholic content by volume, when stored in a dark and cool location, the cherries have an almost unlimited shelf life.

When all the cherries are consumed, the liquid can also be used as a cocktail. Add some fresh Bourbon and stir cold—you’re done!Homemade recipes

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Hay syrup

750 g Hay11/4 l Water 1 kg Sugar

Let the hay steep gently in the water for 30 minutes. Cover and steep for another 30 minutes in the pot, strain the hay and pour. This should provide 1 litre of liquid. Add sugar, stir until it dissolves and bring to a boil. Let the hay syrup cool and pour into clean bottles.

Shelf life in the refrigerator is between 2 and 4 weeks

Oleo Saccharum (Lemon oil sugar)

500 g SugarPeel from 8 lemons

Place the lemon peels in an air-tight, lockable and stable container, add sugar and press with a pestle. Mix everything thoroughly and steep for half a day to a day.

Honey water

500 g Honey200 ml Water

Heat the water. Mix the hot water with the honey until a homoge-neous liquid is formed. Bottle it and let it cool.

Shelf life in the refrigerator is between 2 and 4 weeks.

Demerara sugar syrup

1 Part Demerara sugar1 Part Still water

Bring both ingredients to a boil until the sugar has completelydissolved, let the mixture cool, and pour it into clean containers.

Shelf life in the refrigerator is between 2 and 4 weeks.

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Notes

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Notes

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Notes

71

Index

Baden Revolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Markgräfler cherry . . . 26Birnini . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Red Williams pear . . . 30Black Forest Cherry Cake . . . . . . . . Black Forest cherry . . . 38Breisgau Cooler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mirabelle plum . . . 43Breisgau Manhattan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Red Williams pear . . . 30Cherry Buck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Black Forest cherry . . . 38Cocktail cherries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Homemade recipes . . . 61Cross-Country . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apple and Pear Brandy . . . 58Datschi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plum . . . 51Demerara sugar syrup . . . . . . . . . . . . Homemade recipes . . . 62Dewy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Williams pear . . . 55Fields of Gold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apple and Pear Brandy . . . 59Fruit Spritzer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Apple and Pear Brandy . . . 58Hay syrup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Homemade recipes . . . 63Honey Water . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Homemade recipes . . . 62Huckleberry Finn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild sloe . . . 34Le Fleur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mirabelle plum . . . 42Mironi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mirabelle plum . . . 43Oleo Saccharum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Homemade recipes . . . 63Pear Collins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Red Williams pear . . . 31Pear Gimlet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Williams pear . . . 54Plum Julep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plum . . . 50Prince of Staufen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Markgräfler cherry . . . 26Prunus spinosa saccharum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild sloe . . . 35Raspberry Mojito . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild raspberry . . . 46Raspberry Mule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild raspberry . . . 46Raspberry Smash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild raspberry . . . 47Santa Marta reverse . . . . . . . . . . . . . Markgräfler cherry . . . 27Staufen Fizz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plum . . . 51The Mixture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wild sloe . . . 35Whats Rye . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Black Forest cherry . . . 39Williams Sour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Williams pear . . . 55

3

Imprint/Legal NoticeFirst Edition Staufen im Breisgau 2015

Publisher and copyright © 2015

Alfred Schladerer, Alte Schwarzwälder Hausbrennerei GmbH

Germany

Print with LED-UV technology: Königsdruck, Berlin

Agency: Small Big Brands GmbH

Recipes: Steffen Lohr

Photography cocktails: Katja Hiendlmayer with Olaf Matthey

Illustration, design, cover: Katja Hiendlmayer