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Homemade Eggnog Recipe and HistoryOrigin of a Traditional Colonial Christmas Drink and Winter Cocktail
Eggnog is a holiday drink with a history that traces back to England and Colonial America. This traditional homemade eggnog recipe uses cooked eggs, cream and nutmeg.
For centuries eggnog was prepared and served as a hot beverage and it has only been in the last one-hundred years with the invention of easy refrigeration systems that this holiday cocktail became well-known as a thick, cold beverage found in grocery store dairy cases. Traditional eggnog recipes call for heating the egg-yolks and cream to form thickened custard, making this homemade eggnog a safe, delicious alternative to the commercial product for those who cannot eat raw or unpasteurized egg products. Eggnog History and Origin of New England Holiday DrinkThe history of the word eggnog, often spelled egg nog, is contentious. Some scholars say it is derived from a combination of the words egg and grog, a dilution of rum and water served aboard British Naval vessels to prevent drunkenness. Others believe it comes from the word noggin - a small wooden mug used to serve drinks in taverns. Regardless of etymology, the holiday beverage has its roots in an old English drink called posset. A London recipe from Robert May's 1678 The Accomplisht Cook calls for "twenty eggs, a pottle of good sweet cream," whole cinnamon, nutmeg and sack, a type of alcohol. While posset remained a drink of the wealthy and elite in Britain, due to the limited availability of fresh dairy products by the average city dweller, American colonists had easy access to both dairy products and cheap imported Caribbean rum, making eggnog a popular and affordable holiday beverage. The earliest known published mentions of eggnog appear in 1788 in the New Jersey Journal and the Philadelphia newspaper The Independent Gazetteer. By the late 19th century eggnog had become a social drink served mainly at holiday parties. Several recipe books, including Jennie June's American Cookery Book of 1870, list separate recipes for "egg nog" and "Christmas egg nog," the later including nutmeg and Jamaican rum. Homemade Colonial Eggnog RecipeIngredients:
Directions:
Other popular winter cocktails, such as hot buttered rum, also have origins in Colonial America. Both can be made using whiskey, brandy or bourbon as substitutes for Jamaican rum.
The copyright of the article Homemade Eggnog Recipe and History in Cocktails is owned by Stephanie Jolly. Permission to republish Homemade Eggnog Recipe and History in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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Dec 17, 2008 10:46 PM
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Dec 23, 2008 1:51 AM
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