{"id":8229,"date":"2015-12-21T11:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-12-21T16:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=8229"},"modified":"2021-07-23T12:16:53","modified_gmt":"2021-07-23T16:16:53","slug":"sip-on-a-shrub","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2015\/12\/21\/sip-on-a-shrub\/","title":{"rendered":"Sip on a Shrub"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Anne Rothfeld ~ Looking for a festive drink with historical origins? Prepare a pitcher of shrub to serve when guests arrive. A shrub is a thickened fruit syrup mixed with brandy or vinegar and can be made tarter or sweeter, depending on taste. Don\u2019t be turned off by the sharp flavor, which easily cuts through the syrup\u2014harmony on your taste buds.<\/p>\n From the Arabic word sharab<\/em> (syrup) and the Hindi word sharbat<\/em>, this aromatic syrup comes from ancient Turkey and Persia. Incredibly popular with colonial Americans, cooks used vinegar or brandy as a basic preservative, and every family had its own shrub recipe. During the nineteenth-century American Temperance movement, shrubs were served as refreshing non-alcoholic drinks. In the late twentieth-century, the American craft food and drink movement rediscovered shrubs for their flavoring in tonics, punches, and cocktails.<\/p>\n From The complete family-piece: and, <\/em>country<\/em> gentleman, and farmer\u2019s best guide<\/em><\/a>, 1736<\/p>\n \u201cShrub.<\/p>\n Take 2 Quarts of Brandy, and put it in a large Bottle, and put into it the Juice of 5 Lemons, the Peels of 2, half a Nutmeg; stop it up, and let it stand three Days, and add to it three Pints of white Wine, a Pound and half of Sugar; mix it, and strain it twice thro\u2019 a Flannel, and bottle it up; \u2018tis a pretty Wine and a Cordial.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n From The ladies best <\/em>companion<\/em>: or, A Golden Treasure for the Fair Sex<\/em><\/a>, 1775<\/p>\n \u201cTo Make a Good Shrub.<\/p>\n Mix the juice of five lemons, and the peels of two, with two quarts of brandy, and put to it a nutmeg grated down, then put the whole into a large stone bottle; stop it up and let it stand three days, then put to it three pints of white wine, with a pound and a half of sugar, and strain the whole through a thin flannel cloth, when it must be bottle up, and in a week afterwards it will be ready to use.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
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