Preventing discoloration when making fresh mint liqueur
Twice I have tried to make a fresh mint liqueur (flavored vodka), and both times it has turned a very unpleasant brown/black color. I'd like to figure out how to do this while keeping the nice bright green color, or even no color. The discoloration is also associated with a change in smell - not completely unpleasant, but not the same mint.
The method I tried is just the standard that you read on the first 10 google hits, or the question found on seasoned advice. Wash the mint leaves, put in alcohol, let sit, add sugar syrup, possibly glycerin, and enjoy.
The first time I did this, I left the stems in the mix out of laziness. I let it steep for a week or two, and it was completely brown/black.
This second time I removed the stems, and I also only steeped the leaves for 24 hours. I also used a glass weight to keep the leaves completely submerged. After the 24 hours, I strained the flavored vodka into a clean jar and put it in the cupboard. The mint vodka was always kept in the dark cupboard, at room temperature. 24 hours later, the top half of the vodka had already discolored, and an additional 24 hours later, all of the vodka had browned.
I had hoped that the discoloration was due to something in the leaves oxidizing(?), and that by removing the leaves after a short time, I'd remove what was causing the browning. Sadly, the alcohol appears to have extracted whatever is browning. Note: the leaves themselves also browned in a similar timeframe, and from the top down (they were compacted in the original jar).
The mint is a spearmint variety, for what that's worth. I've not tried it on a different mint, b/c the variety I used is my favorite.
Any ideas on how to prevent the discoloration?
Best Answer
Idea 1: Assuming the leaves are oxidizing: you could add an antioxidant. Vitamin C is handy and will scrounge up oxygen radicals. Crush up some pills and shake them in. It will make it a little sour too - ascorbic acid is vitamin c.
Idea 2: deplete your alcohol solution of dissolved oxygen first. When you heat something to near boiling, the first wave of bubbles is gas coming out of solution. Do that with your alcohol. Add it steaming hot to your steeping vessel (maybe heat up vessel first with warm water so it doesn't crack!), put in mint and then cover it airtight. Maybe that will exclude enough O2 to keep things green. Also would serve as the blanching step in linked article.
I was pleased to see the vitamin C idea was listed in the linked article about keeping pesto from turning black.
https://www.thekitchn.com/good-question-w-4-12832
Pesto is made with basil which is a mint so the same issue as you have. The other recommendations from that article are blanching the basil (yah!) and adding lemon juice (vitamin C!).
Pictures about "Preventing discoloration when making fresh mint liqueur"
Should you tear or chop mint?
Without the tender leaves attached they freeze well, and they're a great addition to your stock pot, or pureed into pestos.) For Mint, Basil, or Sage:Pick the leaves off their woody stems, then gently tear into pieces (this avoids the bruising you can get with knife-chopped herbs).Do you use the stems of fresh mint?
If you're going for aesthetics, by all means stick with the leaves. But if you're simply looking for bold, minty flavor, incorporate the stems into your waste-free cooking routine with abandon.How do you prepare mint for drinks?
If you indeed insist on doing it, you have three steps in the process of menthol extraction:How to Make MINT LIQUEUR
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Images: cottonbro, Karolina Grabowska, cottonbro, Jorge Zapata