Boozy Christmas Mincemeat

You can’t really have an English Christmas without dried fruit and booze.  Certainly not a Dickensian epic – mince pies, smoking bishop (that’s alcoholic), good will to all ….

And you need to get going now.

If ‘mincemeat’ is a concept outside of your cultural Christmas norm, I should explain modern versions contain no meat.  They did used to – and the further back you go the more ‘meaty’ they are.

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Home-made mincemeat is such a simple thing to make.  Even if the idea of a pantry full of preserves comes under the heading of ‘life’s too short ..’, you might want to make an exception for this.

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This is my ‘master’ recipe.  Mincemeat is such a ‘forgiving’ thing to make you can let your imagination fly.  Within the framework of dried fruit, apple, booze and some kind of fat you have endless possibilities.

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I grew up in a house with an almond tree in the front garden and I know ‘cracking’ them is a horrendous task.  So, I don’t do that – but I’m not going to pay extra to buy them blanched. Bring a pan of water to the boil, add the almonds.  1 min.  No more, you don’t want to soften the nut.

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Drain and rinse with cold water.  You can see the ‘skin’ has wrinkled.

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Dry with a clean tea-towel.  You can be as vigorous as you like ..!

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It’s an easy job to slip the almond from the skin.

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You will never again pay a premium for blanched almonds.

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Love it or hate it – ‘mixed peel’.  I love it, but I buy whole mixed peel and chop it myself.

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It’s a completely different product to those nasty little supermarket tubs of ‘mixed peel’.

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You can vary the dried fruit to suit your mood.  I’m using the ‘standard’ – currants, raisins and sultanas.  There’s no reason why you shouldn’t use figs, prunes, cherries …

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Traditionally, the fat is beef suet.  You can, of course, grate your own – or you can buy a packet.  That’s what I do – 200g – I don’t like silly little bits left in a packet so use it all.  There are vegetarian alternatives.  Or you can use butter – freeze and grate.  Butter tastes wonderful, but it’s not a ‘looker’ when it cools.  If you’re the one going to cook with it – when it will return to unctuous loveliness – then it’s a good choice, but not if you’re going to give it as a gift.

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The grated zest of one orange.

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And the zest of one lemon.  Then add the juice of both.  Why would you waste it?

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I chop my almonds by hand as I like the nutty chunks in my mincemeat.

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Peel, core and chop the apple.  I like chunks, but you can grate it.

Then, it’s the spices.  Cinnamon.  Mixed spice.  Nutmeg.

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Add the sugars.  Then the alcohol.  I’m adding whisky.  Brandy, Rum, Disaronno, Cointreau are all lovely alternatives.  Mix.  Clean hands are better than a spoon ..!  Let it all steep in a bowl, covered with cling-film for 24 hours.

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Then pot in warm preserving jars and leave to mature for 2-6 weeks.  After that, it’ll keep for about 3 months.  (Longer and the apple may start to ferment.)

After 2-6 weeks you are ready to bake ..

Yum.

Christmas Mincemeat 16Boozy Christmas Mincemeat Makes 3 500g Le Parfait jars.

  • 250g/2 cups currants
  • 250g/2 cups raisins
  • 250g/2 cups sultanas
  • 200g-250g/ 2 cups Bramley apples, peeled, cored and shopped into small pieces
  • 200g/2 cups suet
  • 150g/1 heaped cup blanched almonds, roughly chopped
  • 175g/1 cup demerara sugar
  • 50g/third cup dark muscovado sugar
  • ½ rounded teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 rounded teaspoon ground mixed spice
  • A grinding of nutmeg
  • 1 lemon, rind and juice
  • 1 orange, rind and juice
  • 125g/1 cup mixed peel, chopped into dice
  • 250ml whisky

Mix together the dried fruit, chopped apple, suet, chopped almonds,, mixed peel,  cinnamon, nutmeg and mixed spice.  Grate the zest of a lemon and orange into the bowl, then squeeze and add the juice. (A warmed fruit gives more juice.)

Add the whisky and give everything a good mix.  Clean hands are easiest.  Cover and leave for 24 hours, giving it all an occasional stir.

Pot the mincemeat up into sterilised jars.  Leave to mature for 2-6 weeks and use within 3 months – or freeze.

Bake.

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