Your guide to a wild botanical night out
What a hoot. A brace of botanists
walk into a bottle shop and gather ingredients for a fancy gin cocktail. Gin,
they discover, is made of bits of conifer, some coriander seeds, citrus peel
and even lavender buds. They search for real
tonic water, with extract of cinchona (quinine) bark and, as they put it, Saccharum officinarum (sugar from sugar
cane).
Their eyes opened, they realise the
shelves are full of botanical concoctions. “This is horticulture! In all of these
bottles!” From this revelationary excursion to a bottle shop in Portland Oregon,
with a cacti expert from Tucsan Arizona, Amy Stewart created The Drunken Botanist and a ‘New York
Times Bestseller’.
Stewart whisks us away on a
breathless journey through the great, and not so great, alcoholic drinks of the
world, satisfying that fundamental equation of life: carbon dioxide plus
sunlight giving us sugar and oxygen, and that sugar with some yeast giving us
alcoholic drinks (and I should add other subsidiary staples, such as bread and
vegemite). It may sound nerdy but this is an infectious and intoxicating book.
The journey takes us from plants we
turn into alcohol (grapes, barley, rice, corn and the like), to the infusions
we add to some (herbs, seeds, fruit), through to the mixers (mint, lemon and
for Stewart it seems, most often jalapeƱo). Within these three sections the
plants are considered in encyclopaedic fashion, in alphabetic order.
I got enough from the first plant, in
the first section, to fortify me for many a plant inspired drinking session. I
guess most people know tequila and mezcal (yes, that’s how the locals spell it)
come from the succulent agave. But I knew less about pulque, the poor cousin of
those Mexican spirits.
Pulque is the product of a sexually
frustrated agave. Agaves are sometimes called century plants, because they grow
for many years without flowering, then bloom and die. They hardly live fast and
die young, but in reality their life span is more like a decade than a century.
Anyway, what the cunning Mexican pulque producer does is cut off the flowering
stalk just as the plant readies itself for its once in a life time chance to
reproduce.
After several months the base of the
plant, now engorged with sap, is lanced, ‘causing its heart to rot’. The rotten
insides are scraped away, irritating the plant into producing an uninterrupted
flow of sap at the rate of a gallon or so a day for many months. A single plant
can produce more a thousand litres before it shrivels and dies. All very anthropomorphic, but also very evocative
and memorable.
Pulque is apparently not very nice to
drink and rather low in alcohol (4-6 percent by volume). ‘There are no dead
dogs, nor a bomb, that can clear a path as well as the smell of pulque’
according to the sixteenth century historian Francisco LĆ³pez de GĆ³mara quoted
by Stewart. It seems to be making a comeback in modern Mexico, although not yet
competing beer, that country’s best selling beverage.
And that’s not the end of the entry
for agave. We learn of Pechuga Mezcal which is allowed to infuse over a raw
chicken breast to balance the sweetness of added local fruit. Stewart
recommends this one, and any tequila or mezcal made from 100% agave. Do avoid
the mixtos, she says, which are made from a mix of agave and other sugars.
And so to B for barley... This book
is a fascinating and stimulating romp through the plant world, using brewed
beverages as hook. And hooked you will be. The book is beautifully produced and
bound, like an old-fashioned compendium or almanac. The writing is racy but
well-grounded. Alongside tales of discovery and inebriation, you get shots of horticultural
advice and explications on botanical nomenclature, all laced with plenty of cultural
and natural history.
Taking a few more sips from The Drunken Botanist, I learn about the
beneficial chemistry of adding a few drops of water to your whiskey (and why
it’s not, in some cases, whisky); the truth about absinthe; how monkey puzzle
seeds can be brewed, chewed and spat to create mudai; plus recipes for Prickly
Pear Sangria, Bison Grass Cocktail and the Perfect Pastis (ingredients: 1 plane
ticket to Paris, 1 summer afternoon and 1 sidewalk cafƩ). There is even a shout
out for the one of the tools of my trade, the International Plant Names Index!
With over 160 plants probed and
exposed, Stewart does well to cover most of our favourite tipples. That said, I
was little disappointed that cloudberry didn’t make the cut. “Rare berries,
gently ripened by long, light summer days and freshened by autumn mists are
handpicked from the untamed Arctic wilderness to make Lapponia liqueurs”
proclaimed the label on the back of the bottle I left in my last house. You
know an alcohol drink is suspect when your son’s friend, an aficionado of the
goon, happily passes on this duty free gift to you nearly full. Let’s just say
it has a lingering pallet, and goes well with The Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoevsky, where it is name
checked a couple of times.
I’m sure it’s bad form to write a
review when you are only part way through a book but I’m an advocate for
responsible reading. In this case I want to savour the pleasure, prizing this
book open with pot of brewed barley or flute of the very best fermented grapes.
It’s the perfect companion, along with my wife Lynda, to take on my next visit
to a pub, cafƩ or botanical bottle shop.
Review of: The Drunken
Botanist: the plants that create the world’s great drinks, by Amy Stewart, Algonquin Books, [$36.99]. This is a lightly modified version of a review published a few days ago in the Australian Systematic Botany Society Newsletter (issue 156). The picture of the end is of a tipsy botanist at Oxford University a few years back.
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