Ratafia

Alcoholic beverages


title: "Ratafia" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["mistelle"] description: "Alcoholic beverages" topic_path: "general/mistelle" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratafia" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Alcoholic beverages ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox drink"]

FieldValue
nameRatafia
imageRatafia.JPG
captionRatafia dels Raiers, from La Pobla de Segur
typeSweet alcoholic beverage
originMediterranean
flavourFruits or kernels, usually almond, green wild walnuts or the kernels of peach, apricot or cherry.
::

| name = Ratafia | image = Ratafia.JPG | image_alt = | caption = Ratafia dels Raiers, from La Pobla de Segur | type = Sweet alcoholic beverage | abv = | proof = | manufacturer = | distributor = | origin = Mediterranean | introduced = | discontinued = | colour = | flavour = Fruits or kernels, usually almond, green wild walnuts or the kernels of peach, apricot or cherry. | ingredients = | variants = | related = | website = | region =

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0e/Ratafià_di_andorno.jpg" caption="Andorno]], Italy"] ::

Ratafia is a broad term used for two types of sweet alcoholic beverages, a flavouring essence whose taste resembles bitter almonds, later to a ratafia flavoured biscuit, a biscuit to be eaten along with ratafia, and later still, to a cherry variety.

The Oxford English Dictionary lists the word's earliest date of use as 1670.

Liqueur

Ratafia liqueurs are alcoholic beverages compound liqueurs or cordials made by the maceration of ingredients such as aromatics, fruits, in pre-distilled spirits, followed by filtration and sweetening, the flavouring ingredients being merely infused in it. Ratafia may be flavoured with kernels (almond, green walnuts, peach, apricot, or cherry), lemon peel and spices in various amounts (nutmeg, cinnamon, clove, mint, rosemary, anise, etc.), typically combined with sugar. Other flavourings can be used, such as vegetables and fresh herbs.

The liqueur is typical of the Mediterranean areas of Spain, Italy, and north-east of France (Champagne and Burgundy). In the Pyrenees Ratafia is a sweet herbal liqueur made by infusing brandy or aqua-vita with a mix of lemon peel, cloves, nutmeg, green walnut peel, cinnamon, and sometimes mint and lemon verben. Up to 50 different herbs can be use, adding complexity and regional uniqueness. Traditionally is prepared around the Summer Solstice (24th of June, St John's Day) when herbs are at their peak, though some prepare it for All Saint's Day (Nov 1), to be consumed starting Christmas accompanying a simple dessert composed of dried fruits, nuts and biscuits during sobremesa (a cherished Mediterranean time spent at the table after a meal, enjoying conversation, dessert, coffee, or a drink connecting with family or friends).

In Abruzzo, Italy, Ratafia is a traditional liqueur made with sour cherries (also known as amarena cherries) and Montepulciano d'Abruzzo wine.

Lazzaroni Amaretto, Luxardo Albicocca, Kahlua, Heering Original Cherry Liqueur, Alpenz Saint Elizabeth Allspice Dram, Carlshamms Flaggpunsch, Seale John D. Taylor's Velvet Falernum are ratafia liqueurs.

The liqueur form of ratafia is mentioned humorously in the lyrics of the song "The Unfortunate Miss Bailey", written by Lou Gottlieb and released by the Kingston Trio in 1959 on their album Here We Go Again!.

Fortified wine

The second type, ratafia de Champagne, a fortified wine, is a type of mistelle, a mixture of marc (grappa) and the unfermented juice of the grape, and is the type produced in France.

D.H. Lescombes, in New Mexico, uses Moscato grapes fortified with brandy to stop the fermentation early, which keeps the residual sugar high.

Biscuit

::quote a small macaroon flavoured with almonds − Collins English Dictionary ::

Ratafia biscuits are made with ratafia essence, sweet almonds, apricot kernels, rosewater, egg white, sugar. Originally made with sweet and bitter almonds, now apricot kernels. Amaretto is a ratafia liquor, thus the ratafia biscuits.

In 1727, The Compleat Housewife by Eliza Smith included a recipe for To make Ratafia Bisket, with the ingredients: bitter almonds, sugar and egg white, making it a confection that is very similar to a modern macaroon.

In 1789, The Complete Confectioner, by Frederick Nutt, a confectioner, formerly apprenticed with Domenico Negri, an Italian who opened the Pot and Pine Apple confectionery shop at 7-8 Berkeley Square, London, founded 1757, included a recipe, "No. 29. Ratafia Biscuits": ::quote Take half a pound of sweet almonds, and half a pound of bitter almonds, and pound them in a mortar very fine, with whites of eggs; put three pounds of powdered sugar, mix it well with the whites of eggs, to the proper thickness into a bason; put two or three sheets of paper on the plate you bake on; take your knife, and the spaddle made of wood, and drop them on the paper, let them be round, and about the size of a large nutmeg; put them in the oven, which must be quick, let them have a fine brown, and all alike, but be careful they are not burnt at bottom, else they will not come off the paper when baked; let them be cold before you take them off. ::

Other uses

Ratafia essence was suggested in a BBC recipe in their 1940 publication Food Facts For The Kitchen Front, for making mock marzipan, along with soya flour, margarine and sugar.

References

Notes

Sources

References

  1. "2019 USA Spirits Ratings". Beverage Trade Network.
  2. Lawson, Nigella. (11 December 2012). "Flavourings for Christmas Baking". Nigella.com.
  3. "Ratafia biscuit".
  4. "Ratafia biscuits". [[Waitrose & Partners]].
  5. "Ratafia biscuits recipes". [[BBC.
  6. "Ratafia: Nut-flavored Liqueur". AtlasMedia Ltd. (EU).
  7. {{Cite OED. ratafia. 9948752037
  8. Froud and Turgeon (1961)
  9. "Ratafia Liqueurs".
  10. (16 May 2018). "Ratafia".
  11. (2016). "Wine Review: DH Lescombes NV "Ratafia" White Table Wine New Mexico USA". Beverage Testing Institute.
  12. "Awards".
  13. "Ratafia biscuit: definition and meaning".
  14. "18th Century: Ratafia Biscuits from Pride and Pudding: The History of British Puddings, Savoury and Sweet by Regula Ysewijn".
  15. "Ratafia Biscuits Recipe".
  16. "Amaretto: definition and meaning".
  17. Smith, E. (Eliza). (2004-12-03). "The compleat housewife: or, Accomplish'd gentlewoman's companion: being a collection of several hundred of the most approved receipts, in cookery, pastry, confectionary, preserving, pickles, cakes, creams, jellies, made wines, cordials. And also bills of fare for every month in the year. : To which is added, a collection of near two hundred family receipts of medicines; viz. drinks, syrups, salves, ointments, and many other things of sovereign and approved efficacy in most distempers, pains, aches, wounds, sores, &c. never before made publick in these parts; fit either for private families, or such publick-spirited gentlewomen as would be beneficent to their poor neighbors. / By E. Smith.".
  18. Smith, Eliza. (1739-02-03). "The Compleat Housewife: Or, Accomplish'd Gentlewoman's Companion:: Being a Collection of Upwards of Six Hundred of the Most Approved Receipts in Cookery, Pastry, Confectionary, Preserving, Pickles, Cakes, Creams, Jellies, Made Wines, Cordials. With Copper Plates Curiously Engraven for the Regular Disposition of Placing the Various Dishes and Courses. And Also Bills of Fare for Every Month in the Year. To which is Added, a Collection of Above Three Hundred Family Receipts of Medicines: Viz. Drinks, Syrups, Salves, Ointments ...". J. and J. Pemberton.
  19. Smith, E. (Eliza). (1773-02-03). "The compleat housewife, or, Accomplished gentlewoman's companion : being a collection of upwards of seven hundred of the most approved receipts in cookery, pastry, confectionary, potting, collaring, preserving, pickles, cakes, custards, creams, preserves, conserves, syrups, jellies, made wines, cordials, distilling, brewing : with copper plates, curiously engraven, for the regular disposition or placing of the various dishes and courses : and also, bills of fare for every month in the year : to which is added, a collection of three hundred receipts of medicines, consisting of drinks, syrups, salves, ointments, &c. which, after many years of experience, have been proved to be innocent in their application, and most salutary in their use : with directions for marketing". London : Printed for J. Buckland, J. and F. Rivington, J. Hinton, Hawes, Clarke and Collins, W. Johnston, C. Crowder, T. Longman, B. Law, T. Lowndes, S. Bladon, W. Nicoll, and C. and R. Ward.
  20. (10 July 2013). "The Pot and Pineapple and Gunter's: Domenico Negri, Robert Gunter, and the Confectioner's Art in Georgian London". Jane Austen's World.
  21. (1807). "The complete confectioner : or, The whole art of confectionary made easy: containing, among a variety of useful matter, the art of making the various kinds of biscuits, drops ... as also the most approved method of making cheeses, puddings, cakes &c. in 250 cheap and fashionable receipts. The result of many years experience with the celebrated Negri and Witten.". London printed: New York : reprinted, for Richard Scott and sold at his bookstore, no. 243 Pearl-street.
  22. (1807). "The Complete Confectioner: Or, The Whole Art of Confectionary Made Easy: Containing, Among a Variety of Useful Matter, the Art of Making the Various Kinds of Biscuits, Drops ... as Also the Most Approved Method of Making Cheeses, Puddings, Cakes &c. in 250 Cheap and Fashionable Receipts. The Result of Many Years Experience with the Celebrated Negri and Witten". reprinted, for Richard Scott and sold at his bookstore, no. 243 Pearl-street.
  23. (1809). "The Complete Confectioner, Or, The Whole Art of Confectionary, Made Easy; with Receipts for Liqueures, Home-made Wines, &c: The Result of Many Years Experience with the Celebrated Negri and Witten". Matthews and Leigh (J. Smeeton, printer).
  24. (December 2012). "Mock Marzipan No.100".

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mistelle