Anyone ever try wassail?

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quadmx08

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I was watching some Alton brown good eats and saw this on sp05 twas the night before good eats. The ale in the recipe he describes as an English bitter. Anyone tried it, sounds interesting? Also the recipe makes quite a lot so I would be a little hesitant to try.


Recipie.

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/wassail-recipe/index.html
Ingredients

6 small Fuji apples, cored
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup water
72 ounces ale
750 ml Madeira
10 whole cloves
10 whole allspice berries
1 cinnamon stick, 2-inches long
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
6 large eggs, separated
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Put the apples into an 8 by 8-inch glass baking dish. Spoon the brown sugar into the center of each apple, dividing the sugar evenly among them. Pour the water into the bottom of the dish and bake until tender, about 45 minutes.
Pour the ale and Madeira into a large slow cooker. Put the cloves, allspice, and cinnamon into a small muslin bag or cheesecloth, tied with kitchen twine, and add to the slow cooker along with the ginger and nutmeg. Set the slow cooker to medium heat and bring the mixture to at least 120 degrees F. Do not boil.
Add the egg whites to a medium bowl and using a hand mixer, beat until stiff peaks form. Put the egg yolks into a separate bowl and beat until lightened in color and frothy, approximately 2 minutes. Add the egg whites to the yolks and using the hand mixer, beat, just until combined. Slowly add 4 to 6 ounces of the alcohol mixture from the slow cooker to the egg mixture, beating with the hand mixer on low speed. Return this mixture to the slow cooker and whisk to combine.
Add the apples and the liquid from the baking dish to the wassail and stir to combine. Ladle into cups and serve.
 
Another one I'd like to try from those early days was called "smoldering bishop". It was a wine punch with sliced fruit in it. You took a red hot poker from the fire & held it in the bunch for a short time to heat it. Not sure what all's in it though.
 
make sure to pour a few drops at the base of an apple tree on the solstice!! i make a wassail every winter (not nearly as elaborate as this one) and drink heartily from homemade wooden cups
 
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