What is oleo-saccharum? First, let’s dissect the word itself. Oleo: oil or fat. Saccharum: sugar. So literally, the word itself simply means oily sugar, or perhaps more appetizingly, sugared oil.

Oleo-saccharum is an ingredient in cocktails and punches that was relatively commonly used in 19th-century bartending as a way to provide an elegantly citrusy flavor and aroma to alcoholic beverages. (For more about the history and use, I recommend David Wondrich’s book Punch.)

How do you make this elixir? It’s simple, really.

First, zest a few lemons, leaving behind most of the white pith. I find that a vegetable peeler is the best tool for this job.

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez


Add sugar. White is easiest to use because it will dissolve quickly when you’re ready to mix the oleo-saccharum into a punch or other beverage. Wondrich calls for two ounces sugar for each lemon’s worth of peel. So if you peel four lemons, use eight ounces sugar. Honestly, though, I usually just eyeball this.

I like to use my hands at this point to gently toss the sugar into the peels. Then, using a mortar and pestle, muddler, or a heavy wooden spoon, pound the lemon peels and sugar until the peels begin to express their oils. Walk away from it for at least half an hour. An hour would be better. Overnight is best.

After enough time, you’ll have a bunch of lemon peels in the bowl, but a nice amount of lemon oil also, pooled up in the bottom of the bowl.

Serious Eats / Amanda Suarez


You can drain the syrup and save it separately from the quick-candied peels, or leave them together.

What you do with it at this point is up to you. You can certainly use it in punch, and your loved ones will rightly deem you a hero and inspiration. Equally lovely, though, is to use it as a basis for lemonade. When my wife was pregnant, I’d serve her glasses full of this flavorful lemonade rich with lemon oils all summer long. It gave her something to enjoy while I crassly tossed back martinis, daiquiris, and other boozy treats.

Other alcohol-free uses include adding it as a sweetener for iced tea, as an ingredient in vinaigrette, or as an ice-cream topping. Oleo-saccharum is so versatile, in fact, that it deserves to occupy a much wider place in a home cook’s arsenal of techniques and condiment shelf.

September 2011

Michael Dietsch

Source link

You May Also Like

You’ll Want to Live in a Bowl of This Creamy Italian Sausage Pasta All Fall

We independently select these products—if you buy from one of our links,…

These Versatile Whiskey Glasses Won Us Over During Testing—and They’re 36% Off in Time for Fall

Colder weather calls for warming cocktails, and there’s perhaps no cozier beverage…

This Is TASTE 272: Natasha Pickowicz & Claire Saffitz

Today’s special episode is from our recent conversation with baking cookbook authors Natasha…

You Could Bake This Gorgeous, Gingery Bornean Chicken and Rice……

Why It Works Using fresh bamboo as a cooking vessel adds a…