What is the right moment to add sugar to make my own coffee liqueur?

What is the right moment to add sugar to make my own coffee liqueur? - White Ceramic Plate With Food

I've been looking for a good coffee liqueur recipe. In some places they add sugar and water before you store the liqueur for a few days or weeks, and others say to add the sugar and water after it.

The 'before' ones use instant coffee which I think it's not in the 'original' (old) recipe.

Does adding the sugar before or after make any difference in the outcome? The liqueurs I have bought usually get thicker as time goes by.



Best Answer

I'll try to answer this.

Concerning the first recipe you linked, it doesn't matter at all whether you add it first or not, since there is no extraction going on. Theres no fresh coffee, no fresh vanilla. Just extract, which of course is already extracted, so no extended wait time is needed! There might still be room for improvement, letting flavors 'marry' and so, but I'd say a day should be enough.

The second recipe is different. It steeps fresh coffee in alcohol, and here it's going to need time. One month is however an extreme amount of time. Usually, hot water and coffee is steeped for seconds, and cold water and coffee is often steeped for 12 hours. Consider that alcohol is a stronger solvent than water. But if going for a true alcoholic extraction, pure is better / faster, so you should steep before adding water, and the sugar probably doesn't make much difference.

This said, I'm not sure you should actually let it steep in alcohol at all, and I'm not sure you should dilute it either.

If I was doing this, I would go for water cold extraction. I'd be concerned that alcohol would extract too much, the same as too long hot water steeping leads to bitter, sour, pungent coffee. I'm not sure why you would want to dilute it with alot of water either. Water adds nothing to the party. Dilute it when using it instead, this leaves you free to choose each time. Perhaps you'd like to mix it with milk instead, sometime?

Do you have a french press? Let 1 part coursely ground coffee steep in 3 parts cold water over night. Use the filter / top to filter it, and pour it into your vodka. I'm not completely sure, but I think 1 part extract to 4 parts vodka would be fine. Use the same ratio of sugar as in the recipes you linked, or after taste.

UPDATE:

I didn't completely read the second recipe before I answered. It says to boil the vodka-mixture. Sure, the alcohol doesn't vanish in an hour, but I'd still say it's an unacceptable waste (spirits are expensive where I'm from!). Also, the effect is the inverse of destillation, so you are left with a weaker, but sweeter, drink. I'm not sure why it says to boil it. It says that it's to 'thicken the liqueur', but they could just use less water instead.

Good luck!




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How do you make coffee liqueur?

Here are 4 easy and delicious ways to drink our coffee liqueur:
  • Splash some in your coffee. No need to measure. ...
  • Make a quick little coffee soda. Pour 2 ounces of coffee liqueur into a glass, add ice and top with club soda. ...
  • Make a White Russian. ...
  • Pour it over a couple scoops of ice cream.


  • Does homemade coffee liqueur need to be refrigerated?

    Technically, opened Kahlua still doesn't require refrigeration. However, if you use it fairly frequently, like a drink or two every weekend, it's probably best to keep it in the fridge.

    How do I thicken homemade Kahlua?

    directions. Combine the sugar and water in a large saucepan over high heat. Bring to a boil and let simmer for 10 minutes or until it begins to thicken.

    How does Gordon Ramsay make coffee liqueur?

    Prepare 450 g of coffee with mocha or even espresso. Pour it into a saucepan with the same weight of sugar and cook over low heat until the sugar is completely dissolved. Once cool, mix the mixture with 250 g of pure alcohol and distribute the liqueur in glass bottles or in a single large bottle.



    How to Make COFFEE LIQUEUR




    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Gareth Willey, Thirdman, Skylar Kang, Skylar Kang