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Title: Hot Rum Toddy
Categories: Drinks Blank
Yield: 12 Servings
1 | lb | Dark brown sugar |
1/2 | lb | Butter, salted |
1 | ts | Nutmeg, ground |
1 | ts | Cinnamon, ground |
1 | ts | Cloves, ground |
1 | ts | White cardamom, ground |
Dark rum, top-quality (a standard "fifth" will serve 12) |
MAKING THE BATTER: Put all batter ingredients (everything but the rum) in a food processor and run it until the mixture turns creamy. Fold it down once with a rubber spatula to make sure the spices are blended in, and run the food processor some more.
Scoop the mixture into a plastic container, and refrigerate. It will keep for many months in the refrigerator, even though it contains butter.
MAKING THE DRINKS: Fill a coffee mug half full of boiling water. The easiest way to do this is to put a mug of hot water in the microwave. If you don't have a microwave, then fill the mug with boiling water, pour it out, then fill it half full of boiling water.
Add about 2 generous tablespoons of batter. Stir until the batter dissolves in the hot water. I use a small wire whisk for this stirring.
Add 2 jiggers (about 3 oz) of the best rum you can afford. When I make this in quantities for parties I like to use Myers Dark Rum.
NOTES:
* Ultimate hot buttered rum recipe -- I started making hot buttered rum from a Trader Vic recipe 15 years ago, and I have gradually evolved it by adding more spices, more butter and less rum.
The way you make a hot buttered rum is to add some "batter" to some rum, and heat it. I like to keep a made-up batch of the batter in the refrigerator in an old margarine tub. For parties I make up a fresh batch.
* One theory of hot-toddy making is that it is impossible to use too much batter, and you should keep stirring more in until you are bored with stirring. Another theory of hot-toddy making is that it is impossible to use too much rum, and that you should keep stirring in more until your friends panic.
: Difficulty: easy. : Time: 5 minutes. : Precision: no need to measure.
: Brian Reid : DEC Western Research Laboratory, Palo Alto, CA
: Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust : reid@decwrl.DEC.COM
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