Beverage News Hubb
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
Beverage News Hubb
No Result
View All Result
Home Beverage News

How to Make Milk Punch Without Citrus? Try Milk Powder

admin by admin
September 18, 2023
in Beverage News


According to pretty much every milk punch primer, the core technique revolves around using an acid, such as citrus juice, to curdle milk, which creates a solid “filter” through which the liquid is strained, yielding a transparent drink. 

That works just fine for sours, but what about spirit-only drinks, like Martinis and Negronis, which have largely been left out of the milk punch canon?

“It’s an unexplored opportunity,” says Daniel Villa, bartender at Supperland, a “modern Southern” restaurant in Charlotte, North Carolina, who has found a workaround using dehydrated milk powder. “A lot of guests don’t like the oddly sour finish on milk punches, even if they like the texture and roundness on the cocktail,” he explains.

Villa found his way to the technique while attempting to perfect a toasted milk Ramos Gin Fizz. Originally, he had homed in on a recipe for toasted cream that called for a 24-hour sous vide to “toast” the dairy. “It works wonderfully,” Villa recalls, “but in terms of practicality, it ties up sous-vide equipment for a long period of time.”

Then he remembered a pastry chef hack: toasted milk powder. (Villa isn’t a pastry chef, but says he cooks and has spent significant time in restaurants.) “Some modern kitchens use it to enhance brown-butter sauces like beurre noisette,” he recalls. “I stumbled backwards into realizing I could hijack the method for milk punching.”

The technique eliminates the need for citrus or other acids, which play a role in “breaking” apart milk, separating it into solid curds and liquid whey. By comparison, powdered milk is “already broken,” explains Villa. “The milk’s already been separated once, during the drying process. It has whey protein and casein”—components of curds, through which the milk punch is filtered—but “the enzymes have broken down to some degree.”

Even when it’s been rehydrated, the milk doesn’t require acid to break down again, especially once introduced to alcohol. The proteins will clump on their own, creating a filter bed to clarify the drink. The technique also works with powdered coconut milk for a vegan variation, he adds. (The process for using the coconut milk is identical to working with powdered dairy milk, though it requires a little more patience to strain.)

A second advantage: The dried milk can be toasted in the oven or on a stovetop, producing the browning referred to as the Maillard reaction, the chemical reaction that causes bread to taste toasted or meat to taste charred—a different flavor than caramelized sugar, he notes.

“The toasting option is a way to inject a lot of flavor,” Villa says. “You’re getting that luxurious body you get from milk punch from the whey. You’re getting the flavor of a brown-butter milk wash, but it’s cleaner at the end of the day—and less tricky.”

The toasted Ramos holy grail didn’t pan out, at least not via the milk powder route (“a gritty mess, it was undrinkable”). But he’s successfully used the combination of techniques in drinks such as the Smooth as Butter, a clarified tequila-based Vieux Carré riff; the Universal Veil, a Rob Roy clarified with mushroom-infused coconut milk (“it smells like the forest floor”); and Postcards to Italy, a white Negroni with a savory twist: It’s milk-punched with coconut milk powder infused with Japanese dashi, which lends subtle umami tones.

“It just opens up an entirely new category with milk punches,” he says. “You could even use it as a treatment for specific spirits or ingredients,” such as a clarified liqueur.

That said, he’s excited to see how others interpret the process, “especially bartenders from other cultures who have a vibrant history of working with coconut or milk in sauces or soups or culinary goods,” Villa says. “I’m looking forward to seeing where other people will take it.”





Source link

Tags: drink hacks
Previous Post

Review: The Balvenie Madeira Cask 15 Years Old and Pedro Ximenez Cask 18 Years Old

Next Post

Cinnamon Date Smoothie – Simple Green Smoothies

Next Post

Cinnamon Date Smoothie - Simple Green Smoothies

Recommended

The Best Non Alcoholic Rosé Wine 2023

June 9, 2023

How Beverage Formulators Keep Things Sweet Without Sugar

January 9, 2023

Don't miss it

Beverage News

This Taipei Izakaya Is Proudly Taiwanese, Down to the Drinks

September 27, 2023
Beverage News

Review: Smokehead Tequila Cask Terminado, Sherry Cask Blast, and Rum Cask Rebel

September 27, 2023
Liquor

Behind José Medina Camacho’s N/A Margarita

September 27, 2023
Liquor

San Fran Cocktail Diary: Live Music, Dancing

September 27, 2023
Beverage News

Vietnamese Coffee Treats – Imbibe Magazine

September 27, 2023
Beverage News

How Do You Make a Piña Colada Without Coconut or Pineapple?

September 26, 2023

© Beverage News Hubb All rights reserved.

Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us

Newsletter Sign Up

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Beverage News
  • Liquor
  • Cocktails & Mocktails
  • Soft Drinks & Healthy Drinks
  • Contact us

© 2022 Beverage News Hubb All rights reserved.