Brandy butter, spicy cocktails and a chocolate log: Yotam Ottolenghi’s homemade Christmas gifts – recipes

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Christmas could be Christmas without brandy butter, chocolate logs and bottles of infused booze, but doesn’t it just feel a bit more like Christmas with them? Either way, making your own, to give as presents, is a surefire way to get into the festive spirit. The spices, the chocolate, the citrus, the booze …

Marzipan brandy butter

This boozy butter is perfect for slathering on toasted panettone, mince pies and Christmas puds. The arak brings with it a hot anise flavour that makes the butter even more delicious, but don’t worry if you can’t get hold of any: just add more brandy instead. Once made, the butter will keep in the fridge for up to two weeks.

Prep 10 min
Blitz 5 min
Makes 1 medium jar
Keep 2 weeks

125g room-temperature unsalted butter
50g icing sugar
50g soft brown sugar
125g good
marzipan (at least 60% almonds) – I like Odense
1 large orange, zest finely grated, to get 1½ tsp (save the rest of the fruit for another use)
½ tsp flaked sea salt
40ml brandy
1 tbsp arak
, or 1 tbsp extra brandy

Put the butter, both sugars, marzipan, orange zest and salt in a food processor, then blitz for two to three minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl once or twice as you go, until smooth. With the motor running, slowly trickle in the brandy and arak, if using, and blitz for another minute, until well blended and slightly fluffy; don’t be tempted to overmix or the mixture will split. Spoon into a sterilised jar, tie with a pretty ribbon and keep chilled for up to two weeks.

Hawaij-spiced chocolate log

Yotam Ottolenghi’s hawaij-spiced chocolate log.
Christmassy and chocolatey: Yotam Ottolenghi’s hawaij-spiced chocolate log.

The tart barberries and sweet hawaij spice make this super-chocolatey treat extra-special. Stir a tablespoon of booze into the egg mixture, if you like, to make this an even more festive and grown-up treat.

Prep 20 min
Cook 20 min
Chill 3-4 hours
Makes 1 large (or 2 small) logs
Keep 1 week

30g barberries, or cranberries
1 large orange, zest finely grated, to get 1½ tsp, then juiced, to get 45ml
80g soft brown sugar, plus ¼ tsp extra for the barberries
Flaked sea salt
140g 70% cocoa dark chocolate

80g milk chocolate
80g skin-on almonds
, toasted and roughly chopped
80g ginger nut biscuits, broken into small pieces
40g mixed peel, chopped into 1mm pieces
1 egg plus 1 egg yolk (save the white for another use)
¾ tsp ground ginger
8 green cardamom pods
, split open, seeds extracted and finely ground in a mortar – you want ½ tsp ground seeds
⅛ tsp freshly ground nutmeg
1¼ tsp ground cinnamon
⅛ tsp ground cloves
1 tbsp icing sugar
1¼ tsp sumac

Put the barberries in a small saucepan with the orange juice, the extra quarter-teaspoon of sugar and a pinch of salt, put on a medium heat and simmer gently for a minute or two. Mix well, then set aside so the barberries soak up the juice and plump up.

Quarter-fill a medium saucepan with water and bring to a simmer. Put both chocolates in a medium bowl and add a quarter-teaspoon of salt. Turn down the heat under the simmering water, then put the chocolate bowl on top of the saucepan, making sure that the base of the bowl isn’t touching the water. Stir until the chocolate has melted, then take the bowl off the heat and stir in the orange zest, almonds, ginger nuts and mixed peel, until they are all well coated.

Put the whole egg and egg yolk in a medium bowl with the remaining 80g sugar, all the spices and a pinch of salt. Put this over the pan of still simmering water and whisk for two or three minutes, until the sugar is melted and the mixture is fluffy and doubled in size. Take off the heat, stir in the soaked barberries and the chocolate mixture, and leave to cool for five minutes – don’t leave it any longer, or it might set.

Put a large sheet of greaseproof paper on a flat surface and spoon the chocolate mixture in a rough sausage shape in the middle. Fold the paper over the chocolate and use the paper to tease the chocolate mixture into a longer sausage shape about 30cm long x 3cm wide. Twist the ends to enclose the mix, then transfer to a large tray. Refrigerate for three to five hours, reshaping the log inside its paper every 30 minutes, so it gets nicely rounded as it sets.

Once the sausage is fully set, peel off the paper and put the log back on the tray. Sieve the icing sugar into a small bowl, mix in the sumac, then sprinkle all over the log, shaking the tray to roll it in the sugar mixture until it’s completely covered.

Wrap up in clean greaseproof paper, twist the ends to seal and tie with decorative ribbon. It will keep in the fridge for up to a week.

Coffee and cacao-infused tequila

Yotam Ottolenghi’s coffee and cacao-infused tequila.
Yotam Ottolenghi’s coffee- and cacao-infused tequila.

This is a great present for someone who loves an espresso martini or a white Russian, and can be made weeks ahead. Keep the original tequila bottle, because it’s a handy vessel for your gift; if you like, remove the original label and replace it with one you’re made yourself. I’ve also given instructions on how to make a tequila frappé cocktail, inspired by Mexican flavours and Vietnamese coffee, for which I thank Oren Coleman, our head barman at Rovi.

Prep 5 min
Cook 5 min
Infuse 48 hr
Keep 2 months+

1 x 750ml bottle tequila blanco
100g light brown sugar
20g cacao nibs
25g coffee beans
, lightly crushed
1 vanilla pod, split lengthways (or 3 spent pods or 1 tsp vanilla essence)
1 ancho chilli (7g), or mulato chilli

For the tequila frappé cocktail (to serve 4)
1 tsp coffee beans
1 tsp cacao nibs
¼ tsp light brown sugar
1 lime wedge
60ml condensed milk

First infuse the tequila. Put the first four ingredients in a sterilised one-and-a-half-litre jar. Scrape the seeds out of the vanilla pod, if using, and drop both the pod and the seeds into the jar.

In a small frying pan on a high heat, toast the chilli for 20 seconds on each side, until fragrant and pliable, then remove and discard the stem and seeds, and add the flesh to the jar. Screw on the lid, shake well and leave to infuse for two days (don’t give it any longer, or it will turn bitter); shake the jar once or twice a day to diffuse the flavours. The mixture will turn a dark coffee colour.

Pour the infusion through a fine-mesh sieve set over a large bowl and discard all the solids except the vanilla pod. Return the liquid and vanilla to the jar (or decant it into a bottle), seal and store in a cool, dark place, where it will keep for at least two months.

To make the tequila frappé, first make a coffee-salt rim. Put the coffee, cacao, sugar and an eighth of a teaspoon of salt in a mortar or spice grinder, grind finely, then tip into a wide, shallow bowl. Run the lime wedge around the rims of four martini glasses (or small tumblers), then roll the rims in the spiced salt to coat.

Pour 120ml infused tequila into a blender, add the condensed milk and 160g ice (about eight cubes), then blitz for 30 seconds, until smooth and frothy. Divide between the four glasses and serve cold.

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