But my parents have been keeping something from me. Apparently, one can substitute wine for the cider brewing in the slow cooker and it is a perfectly acceptable holiday beverage. Who knew? I first tried hot, mulled wine at work, of all places, when we were "testing" some comped Crock Pots. Sold, I researched recipes for mulling spices and brewed up another batch for a holiday party I hosted the next night. My addition of apple cider to the mix -- a tip from my coworker -- helps tone down the harshness of the wine as it heats up and becomes more potent.
Tip: Conveniently assemble this before your guests arrive so they can't tell you're dumping the cheap stuff in this. Trader Joe's Charles Shaw "Two-Buck Chuck" works perfectly!
Spicy, Hot Mulled Wine-Cider
(don't fret, all amounts are scrappable and flexible)
2 750mL-bottles of dry red wine, i.e. Cabernet Sauvignon
750 mL apple cider or apple juice, to taste
1/2 cup brown sugar, to taste
1 orange, sliced, rind reserved
3 cinnamon sticks, broken in half
20 whole cloves
8 whole allspice
4 peppercorns
pinch grated nutmeg
cheesecloth
4-quart slow cooker*
Pour two bottles of wine into slow cooker.
Add apple cider to slow cooker a little bit at a time, tasting to determine desired potency and flavor. Set slow cooker to high heat.
Peel rind from orange with a vegetable peeler, avoiding white pith, so it forms strips.
Rinse and wring a 12"x12" square of cheesecloth. Add orange rind, cloves, allspice and peppercorns. Bundle into a small sack, tie off with kitchen string or strip of cloth and add to slow cooker to seep.
Slice used orange -- or a new orange, to preserve the pretty orange-rind border -- into rounds and add, along with cinnamon sticks and pinch of nutmeg, to slow cooker.
Add brown sugar a little bit at a time to slow cooker and stir, tasting to determine desired sweetness.
Slow cooker may take up to 3 hours at high heat to sufficiently warm the liquid. Once mulled wine has reached desired temperature and flavor, turn heat to low and remove spice sack, respectively.
Makes about 20 mug-fulls.
*Can be made over low heat on the stove. However, take great care not to allow the wine to come to a boil, or you will lose all the warm, alcohol-y goodness.
1 comment:
I am not ashamed. I will go to Trader Joe's and pay $2.99 for a bottle of wine and I will enjoy it as much as you enjoy yours. In fact, I have a case of his cabernet in my basement.
Agree or disagree:
http://www.slantly.com/health/proudly-drink-vineyards-Charles-Shaw-3457615934
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