8 things you need to know about Mezcal

Mezcal is a distilled spirit made from any type of agave plant. The word Mezcal comes from the Nahuatl words “metl” and “ixcalli”, which means “oven-cooked agave.” Agaves are found in many parts of Mexico, as well as south of the equator. However, …

Mezcal is a distilled spirit made from any type of agave plant.

The word Mezcal comes from the Nahuatl words “metl” and “ixcalli”, which means “oven-cooked agave.” Agaves are found in many parts of Mexico, as well as south of the equator. However, Oaxaca (a southern state of Mexico) is where most of Mezcal is made, thus granting it the unofficial title of “The World Capital of Mezcal.”

Mezcal plays a big role in the culture of Oaxaca. It’s more than just something to drink; it’s almost a family member and a part of heritage. It has traditionally been used to rub into children’s rashes, welcome home loved ones, or be used as a social glue at gatherings and celebrations.

How Is Mezcal Made?

First things first, Mezcal isn’t simply made. It’s crafted.

It all starts with farming. Baby agaves are planted and nurtured with water and sun for up to eight years. The plants are constantly cleaned and cared for as they grow in fresh Matatlán soil; this gives the Mezcal its hearty and earthy essence later in the process. When they’re ready, the heart of the agave is harvested, and the leaves are removed in order to get only the pineapple (the “piña”), which contains the most sweetness. 

Then, it’s on to the roasting. A fire with pine wood logs in the ground is covered in stones, and the agaves are carefully piled on top. This is where Mezcal coined its name from Nahuatl mexcalli, the oven-cooked agave. This process can take up to five days and is what adds the distinct note of cooked agave to the final product.

Milling is the next step where the juices and fiber are either mashed or milled out of the cooled agave plant. Then, it’s on to fermenting. During Mezcal’s fermentation processing, pinewood barrels are used wherein water is added to the juice and agave fiber to begin the process. This is when alcohol starts being created. Fermenting can take up to eight days.

The final step is a double distillation. It begins by mixing the fermented agave juice with the fiber. Then, in the second distillation, the head and heart of the first distillation are taken and distilled another time. This process separates the water from the alcohol and truly captures the alcohol into the final spirit.

What’s the Difference Between Mezcal and Tequila?

Technically, any spirit made from agave is classified as a type of Mezcal, making tequila a type of Mezcal. So, all tequilas are Mezcals, but not all Mezcals are tequilas. Here are the three differences. 

1) They’re produced in different regions

In the same way that real champagne comes from France and true scotch is made in Scotland, tequila and agave have different “homes,” if you will. 

Mezcal’s true home is in Oaxaca, where almost 90% of all Mezcal is made. Jalisco, a state northwest of Oaxaca, is where tequila comes from. There’s some overlap for regions producing these two liquors, but the true connoisseurs know that the devil is in the details, and in this case, in the regions. 

2) They’re made from different types of agave

There are almost 200 types of agave plants. Mezcal can be made from more than 30 of them, which allows for versatility with blending different agaves to create different final products. Tequila can only be made from one: weber blue agave. 

3) They’re made differently 

Mezcal gets its signature smoky flavor from cooking the agave in underground pits, which are lined with hot rocks that burn for about 24 hours before the agave is added to begin the cooking process. By roasting the agave plants, it gives them a rich, savory, and smoky taste.

True artisanal Mezcals use this traditional method rather than more modern techniques. While it requires more attention to detail and takes longer, this extra love and care are what give Mezcal its special smokiness and multi-dimensional taste. 

Tequila is made by steaming the heart (or piña) of the agave plant in above-ground ovens and then distilling the liquid in copper pots. Both liquors are harvested from the agave plant’s core, but it’s in the production process where the two start to differ. 

4) They come in all ages

Blanco or Silver tequila is usually bottled right after it’s distilled or aged for less than two months in stainless steel or oak barrels. Joven is Mezcal that’s bottled right after it’s distilled or aged for less than two months. Reposado is tequila or Mezcal that’s been in oak barrels for at least two months but less than a year. Añejo is tequila or Mezcal that’s been aged for about one to three years in oak barrels. And Extra Añejo is tequila or Mezcal that’s been aged for at least three years in oak barrels.

What Does Mezcal Taste Like?

People always describe Mezcal as smoky, but it’s really so much more than that. It’s complex, sweet, and has all kinds of unique undertones that leave you wanting more.

But it doesn’t always need to taste like smoke. Mezcal usually tastes a little charred because of the way it’s produced, but it can have other profiles like floral, fruity, or earthy. It usually comes back to location; the Mezcal taste will vary depending on where the agave was grown and the production process used.

Flavored Mezcal is no such thing. Mezcal isn’t like other spirits, such as vodka, that can be created using different flavors. If you want to play around with the taste of Mezcal, cocktails open doors to a wide variety of mixes and recipes you can try.

Is Mezcal a Stimulant?

Mezcal can give you the euphoric and energized feeling the same way that stimulants do. This is likely because Mezcal is pure, 100% agave, and free of any additives or sweeteners (like the different flavors infused into other alcohols, like vodka). This is what helps Mezcal drinkers feel light and uppity rather than heavy and “drunk.”

The moral of the story is that while Mezcal can’t technically be a stimulant, it often feels like one.

Can You Drink Mezcal Straight?

Mezcal brings a full experience of complex flavors that can and should be enjoyed on its own. When drinking Mezcal on its own, hold off on the ice and sip it at room temperature to fully enjoy its deep and exotic flavors. Traditionally, a glass of Mezcal is also served with a pinch of salt and an orange slice. 

Sometimes, salt is mixed with ground fried larvae (a bug), chili peppers, and salt, which makes “sal de gusano” (worm salt). Cheaper Mezcals will sometimes have little worms floating at the bottom of the bottle. While this is intended to be a marketing tool to get people talking about worms in their bottle, it’s actually a real part of the Mezcal culture and tradition. 

That being said, Mezcal is no stranger to the cocktail world. Different Mezcals’ undertones can be played up to enhance their fruity, spicy, or nutty taste. It’s commonly served in a Margarita or Old-Fashioned Cocktail. It’s also fun to mix Mezcal with fruit flavors like mango, guava, and even pineapple. A splash of lime or honey never hurt anyone either. 

The versatility of Mezcal is part of what makes it so lovable. Neat, on the rocks, or in a cocktail, it’s up to you. 

Is Mezcal Healthy?

It may be a bit of a stretch to call any kind of alcohol healthy, but as far as alcohols go, Mezcal is one of the best.

Mezcal is 100% agave and free of additives and sweeteners, which in general is a good thing when compared to other, highly processed drinks.

Tell Us a Little About Rosaluna

Rosaluna is an all-natural, handmade agave spirit distilled in the rolling hills of Santiago, Matatlán—the heartland of Mezcal in Oaxaca, Mexico.

The beautiful thing about Mezcal is its simplicity in ingredients. Rosaluna is made purely with our own agave, water, and obviously, lots of love.

  • Gluten-free
  • Non-GMO
  • Vegan
  • Zero Carb
  • Plant-based
  • Carbon Neutral 

Rosaluna was born out of a passion for Mezcal and is rooted in the simple thought that Mezcal is, and should be, for everyone.

Originating in the mystical hills of Oaxaca, Mexico, Rosaluna is handmade by a sister and brother duo whose family has been lovingly creating the spirit for over six generations.

We grow, harvest, cook, ferment, distill, and bottle Rosaluna from start to finish, giving us an uncanny advantage over quality control and consistency. 

Rosaluna is full of bright and brilliant agave. By allowing our agaves to mature to almost 8-years, they begin fermenting before harvest – ensuring a refreshing citrus top note with a more subtle hint of smoke; this truly makes us the Mezcal for everyone. 

Virtual Pancake Cooking Party Results!

Our guests had a wonderful time with the Live from The Food Channel & SugarGeek Studios: “SPONGEBOB VIRTUAL PANCAKE COOKING PARTY!” The event was held on July 25 and 26, 2020 as part of the world builders celebration in the first-ever virtual …

Our guests had a wonderful time with the Live from The Food Channel & SugarGeek Studios:  “SPONGEBOB VIRTUAL PANCAKE COOKING PARTY!”

The event was held on July 25 and 26, 2020 as part of the world builders celebration in the first-ever virtual Comic-Con. Just imagine a live virtual cooking get-together, taught  by cake master Liz Marek. Wait–you don’t have to imagine it when you can see the results from our  participants.

Everyone was able to  make pancakes that looked like their favorite SpongeBob characters in this free event.

Here are a few of the responses:

Thanks so much! I had a fantastic morning, really put a “schmile” on my face. Let’s do it again! – Chef Mitchie

Thank you for this wonderful class! My children LOVED creating these masterpieces, especially eating them. 😁 – Letha M. Brown on behalf of
Novik Ashley, age 7
Mason Yazzie, age 5
Vincent Valdo, age 15
Let me know when you do another Zoom Party! – Lisa Provenza-Bebar
Thanks sooo much for today’s class. I’ve been wanting to try this for a while but didn’t have the confidence to jump in. Although I didn’t do the Spongebob pancakes, I appreciated all the guidance, support and tips to jump right in. My son absolutely adored my attempt at the avengers pancakes. In fact, he ate two huge pancakes when I normally can only get him to eat one or two mini ones. I may have set myself up for a lot more pancake art in my future. Thanks again!!! –Yvette, with Kayden too!!
Pancakes by Judy Flores, above.
Thank you for this fun event. Here  are our creations  (above). – Dan & Baily Hartman
Hi, thanks again for hosting the panel – it added some much needed interactivity and fun to this year’s comic con! I made a food coloring free “Krabby patty” stack of pancakes! Thanks to Liz and her husband for all the great pancake tips! –Eden Arnold

Pancakes submitted by Audelia Verhoff, above.

My attempt at doodle bob for the first time. 😂 😂 this is what happens when I don’t get the right size tip! –Veronica Golenia

Morilak family pancakes. – Fran Morilak

Pancakes by Alessandra (5) and Lennon (7). So fun!!!!! Thank you!

Pancakes by Caroline Gonzalez Arroyo (above).

Pancakes by Precious Kelly (above).

 

 

The online pancake guru for the zoom was Sugar Geek’s Liz Marek. Marek is an author and instructor living in Portland, Oregon with her husband and two kids. Liz Marek has been creating fun and creative food on her YouTube channel (youtube.com/sugargeekshow) and her online cake decorating school (www.sugargeekshow.com) since 2009. She named her school “Sugar Geek Show” because of her obsessions with baking and #geekculture. Liz often combines her love for comic book characters, movies and anime into her cake creations.

#SDCC@home,  #FTL2020,  #futuretechlive,  #foodchannel,  #sugargeek

Cooking in a COVID-19 Crisis: Day Four

Photo by Benjamin Ashton on Unsplash Cooking in a COVID-19 Crisis: Day Four This is No. Four of this somewhat unusual recipe series, but we recognize it’s been weeks of #stayhome for many people. It’s time for a break. It’s also likely time for a …

Photo by Benjamin Ashton on Unsplash

Cooking in a COVID-19 Crisis: Day Four

This  is No. Four of this somewhat unusual recipe series, but we recognize it’s been weeks of #stayhome for many people. It’s time for a break. It’s also likely time for a trip to the grocery store, assuming you haven’t been for a week or more. The good news is your local grocery stores are probably still operating their meat or deli counters, with even more attention to safety and health than ever before.

This is the time to take advantage of the skills of those behind the counter. One of my  favorite things to pick up to bake at home is stuffed pork chops. My store has a bountiful selection of stuffings, already bound up inside a nicely butterflied  chop. Raisin and apple, mushroom and sage, wild rice, even plain—something for just about any taste buds. Choose yours, take it home and bake it, and you are good to go!

Pork Chops

This is a deli-ready dish that will make you feel like you spent hours in prep. Serve it with a side of pork gravy if desired, and something out of the everyday like canned cranberry sauce.

Step 1: Pick up stuffed pork chops from your grocer’s deli counter.

Step 2: Put the chops in a casserole dish, cover it with foil, and bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes—taking the  foil off for the final 15. You can dress it up by adding canned cherries if you  want.

Step 3: Prepare your  sides—something like cranberry sauce, applesauce, and a green veggie.

Step 5: Serve, add a drink and dessert, and put up your feet while you watch whatever is in your queue.

Ingredients needed from your pantry (or the grocery store):

  • Stuffed porkchops from the deli/butcher counter
  • Packaged mix or canned gravy mix if desired
  • Canned cherries (usually found with the pie ingredients, but look for the non-jellied kind)
  • Side dishes such as vegetable and fruit

The price point on these is cheaper than you’d think, and they know just how to do it without the pork chops falling apart—trust them. Of course, you can always do the alternative of buying butterfly chops and stuffing them with your own creation (or packaged, such as StoveTop).

Be sure to plan ahead so you can limit your trips to the grocery store, and be safe out there!

 

Cooking in a COVID-19 Crisis: Day Three

Shortcut cooking at its best!

We don’t live on baked goods alone, but apparently baking has a new fascination. People who have never made bread before are trying it, putting packaged yeast in the endangered column. Cinnamon rolls, banana bread, even hot cross buns have all crossed my feed from everyday cooks.

Perhaps it’s a primordial need for carbs, and bread feels more virtuous than baking cookies. However, not everyone has the baking gene, and the desire for something comforting and yeasty doesn’t necessarily have to be fulfilled with hours spent waiting for something to rise before  baking.

Enter biscuits and gravy. My grandmother can be credited (or blamed) with my love for this  dish. She’d roll out fresh biscuits, fry up the sausage, and use the remaining grease to make the most delectable gravy my childhood heart could imagine. She’d bring it all to the table with flour smudged up her forearms and, often, in her hair. The smell throughout the house was tantalizing, and just the memory makes me salivate just a little.

Last year we had a big family event where 16 of us ended up in one house, sharing the cooking and clean up and having a wonderful time, with other family members nearby. At one point I suggested biscuits and gravy, and the next thing I knew we had 26 coming for breakfast. I took the shortcut of open-and-bake biscuits, but did the quick gravy from scratch—and the method below shortens it even more. In our theme of supporting local restaurants while still cooking, try this out on your carb-craving family.

Shortcut Biscuits & Gravy

Sure, you can make biscuits from scratch, or pop open a can (which is my usual go-to shortcut). However, times like these call for a quick drive through your favorite biscuit breakfast place. The easiest thing to do is drive-thru a Brahm’s, if you have one in your  area. Trust me, we’ve tested a huge sample of biscuits and gravy, and while Another Broken Egg Café has the best, Brahm’s is a good back up  found in more places.

For biscuits alone, though we tend to favor Hardee’s biscuits, but you may have other great choices in your  town. If you aren’t going to take the easiest road  and just pick up the full meal, the following is  about as easy as we can make it!

Step 1: Send someone to pick up the hot biscuits, as many as you need (and don’t fear the leftovers). If they don’t sell the biscuits by themselves, ask for them deconstructed. OR, pop open and bake a tube of Grands.

Step 2: Meanwhile, fry up one tube of Jimmy Dean regular/mild sausage in a frying pan.

Step 3: Add ¼ cup flour to the cooked sausage.

Step 4: Add 2 ½ cups whole milk and stir quickly.

Step 5: Add a little salt and a LOT of black pepper.

Step 6: Serve with coffee and juice. Leftovers, if any, microwave just fine.

Ingredients needed from your pantry (or the grocery store):

  • Grands Homestyle biscuits (if baking at home)
  • Jimmy Dean sausage
  • Flour
  • Milk
  • Salt and pepper
  • Coffee
  • Choice of juice

As always, be sure to plan ahead and limit your trips to the grocery store, and be safe out there!

 

Photo by John Cameron on Unsplash

 

Cooking in a COVID-19 Crisis

Are you running out of recipes? Unsure whether to eat out or cook at home? Torn between supporting local restaurants versus braving the grocery store aisles? Here’s day one of a solution, complete with an easy recipe for your family during this crisis.

Photo by Sara Cervera on Unsplash

Day One

When I look at most recipes online or in cookbooks I pass. In fact, I’ve always said that I read cookbooks as though they are works of fiction. Beautiful photos, striking ideas, flavors that sound delicious—but ingredients and instructions that are far beyond what I have any desire to do.

Even in these days of #stayathome, I’m still working, doing my share of hours-long Zoom meetings and following through with my assignments. In fact, I think that there is an extra burst of creativity in some of my work, since I’ve cut out the commute, the make-up, even the getting dressed—like a good part of America. Which means I still don’t have the pure time it takes to do a lot of cooking, let alone the ability to shop for ingredients or equipment (is saffron an essential? Hmmm).

Then there’s the argument that we should be supporting local restauranteurs as much as possible. We’ve done our share of take out and, in fact, have spent a somewhat exorbitant amount on extra tips. We even bought Easter dinner from one of our finer dining establishments, because when else can we sample their variety and easily store the leftovers?

However, I am actually cooking more than usual. As I follow social media, it seems the world is, as well. I see comments about how kitchen appliances have never had such a work out, and how dishwasher detergent should have been what was hoarded. I see people seeking recipes and worrying because they, too, are working AND teaching their children AND preparing not just one, but often three meals a day. No wonder the stats show hot dog sales have been up.

So, without benefit of photos, I’ll take a few days to post simple recipes that are doable with simple ingredients. This is not to say that “simple” is a new idea, but some of these are geared to my own #stayhome experience. If nothing else, perhaps this will help a few of my friends as I share what’s worked for me. Here goes day one, with a recipe that crosses both the home kitchen and the restaurant world.

Spaghetti &  Meatballs in the time of COVID-19

Don’t have time for prep and want to support a local restaurant? Here’s how.

Step 1: Call any local sub shop and order deconstructed meatball sub sandwiches, one per person you  are feeding. Arrange for curbside pick-up or delivery. (We used Firehouse Subs because their meatball subs are really good).

Step 2: Open a jar of spaghetti sauce and put the meatballs in the sauce to warm them back up.

Step 3: Prepare a salad and dressing to accompany the meal (if desired)

Step 4: Take the sandwich bread and turn it into garlic bread, spreading a garlic/butter mixture on it. Just before serving time, broil the bread to melt the butter and make it toasty. Your deconstructed sandwich may come with cheese, and you can use it on the bread for cheesy-garlic bread.

Step 4: Cook your spaghetti (we like thin spaghetti or angel hair) according to package directions.

Step 5: Serve salad, spaghetti with sauce and meatballs, add a little Parmesan cheese to taste, and you have a meal! Add dessert if you’ve been baking then suggest the family do clean-up, and go back to binge-watching Tiger King.

Ingredients needed from your pantry (or the grocery store):

  • Spaghetti sauce
  • Spaghetti noodles
  • Parmesan cheese
  • Prepared garlic
  • Butter
  • Salad/salad dressing ingredients

You can dress up  your  bread with a sprinkle of sweet paprika or Italian spices. You can use garlic powder or the jarred garlic pieces. You can even get Italian sausage and cook it up  in small pieces to throw in if you want to extend the meal—or buy prepared meatballs from the meat department. There are countless ways to make a simple Italian meal your own.

Be sure to plan ahead and limit your trips to the grocery store, and be safe out there!

[protected-iframe id=”f0d37bc4e201cb5aca1b328f0f5ea2f1-130871110-123422544″ info=”https://www.firehousesubs.com/” ]