Wassail
Wassail is a traditional Elizabethan recipe for ale flavoured with apples, honey and spices that was traditionally served heated at Christmas. The full recipe is presented here and I hope you enjoy this classic Elizabethan version of Wassail.
prep time
20 minutes
cook time
20 minutes
Total Time:
40 minutes
Serves:
10–12
Rating:
Tags : Spice RecipesBritish Recipes
From Medieval times the term
Wassail referred a hot spiced wine for drinking healths on
Christmas Eve, New Year's Eve, and Twelfth Night celebrations. It was said to have originated with the fifth-century legend of the beautiful Saxon
Rowena, who toasted the health of the Brythonic King
Vortigern with the words
Wæs-hael (your health!). Mead was also used (and may generally have been a more common base for Wassail than the far more expensive wine). Wassail was always served from a special bowl (which was definitely
not the modern punch bowl) called the Loving Cup by early monks. It was fashioned from sturdy materials, most commonly wood and more rarely pewter. The special wooden bowl, sometimes rimmed with metal and dressed with festive ribbons, was not only the serving bowl but also the drinking bowl, as it was passed from hand to hand drunk from directly.
Original Recipe
Wassail
Next crown the bowl full
With gentle Lamb's Wool
Add sugar, nutmeg, and ginger,
With store of Ale. too,
And thus ye must doe
To make the Wassail a swinger.
This verse originates from Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night and though not strictly a recipe the verse above does give us the main ingredients of one Elizabethan variant of the traditional Wassail drink, called
Lamb's Wool. This is made from heated ale which forms a frothy layer on it's top (hence the name Lamb's Wool).
Modern Redaction
Ingredients:
3l ale (India pale ale is good but porter also works well)
12 small apples (
crab apples for the traditional recipe, but lady apples also work)
3 tbsp
honey
¼ tsp freshly-ground
nutmeg
¼ tsp powdered
cinnamon
2 tsp freshly-grated
ginger
Method:
Bake the apples in a hot oven until they begin to split. Divide your ale between two pots. Place about ¾ in one pot and heat this gently until warm. Place the remainder in a second pot (which must be able to hold all the liquid), add the apples, honey and spices to this and bring to the boil. Now pour the warmed ale into this and turn off the heat. Keep pouring the heated ale between the two pots until a large amount of froth has accumulated on the top (this is the Lamb's Wool). Pour into a heated bowl and gather your guests around to drink.
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