Cream Base
2 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Cream Base
Fed up paying £4.50 for cream base mix to make up cream liqueurs for SHMBO, I had a little play and came up with this.
Use Coffee Whitener, not the light version as the standard supermarkets own contains more glucose. Mix 4 parts whitener with 1 part very hot (not boiling) water in a blender until completely smooth add half a teaspoon of Dr Oetker Glycerine (cheaper than HBS versions) then some sweetener to taste, I used wine sweetener (less volume), or you could make up some sugar syrup.
I used 250 grams of powder which made up enough for 2 bottles, using only 150ml of the finished item per bottle and a little for tasting, total cost under £1.
SHMBO made no comments when she tried the finished liqueur, I only told her after testing it.
Use Coffee Whitener, not the light version as the standard supermarkets own contains more glucose. Mix 4 parts whitener with 1 part very hot (not boiling) water in a blender until completely smooth add half a teaspoon of Dr Oetker Glycerine (cheaper than HBS versions) then some sweetener to taste, I used wine sweetener (less volume), or you could make up some sugar syrup.
I used 250 grams of powder which made up enough for 2 bottles, using only 150ml of the finished item per bottle and a little for tasting, total cost under £1.
SHMBO made no comments when she tried the finished liqueur, I only told her after testing it.
Always give the hardest job to the laziest person because they will always find the easiest way to do it.
-

vino-tinto - Senior Distiller

- Posts: 449
- Joined: Tue Oct 08, 2013 4:45 am
- Location: East of England
Re: Cream Base
Many lifetime's ago, I used to work in a bakery. We used to "reconstitute" milk powder, water and "sweet cream butter" in a machine that basically heated, churned and then chilled it down to a double cream thickness so it could be whipped and used in the cake production.
Ergo you could likely add a little bit of unsalted butter while its being blitzed for a slightly more creamy, thicker consistency but so it wouldn't split and need stabilising in some way......
Ergo you could likely add a little bit of unsalted butter while its being blitzed for a slightly more creamy, thicker consistency but so it wouldn't split and need stabilising in some way......
-

Phantom - Master Distiller

- Posts: 1460
- Joined: Sat Jun 14, 2008 6:31 pm
- Location: Land of Nod (South)
- Stills: smart still and T500
2 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest