While most catering establishments make one huge punch-bowl of mulled wine that is kept warm, managing director Christian Malnig explains that at Kipferl, every cup is freshly made: a fruity red wine is heated with a little hot water and infused with organic mulling spice from bio-producer Here in London, you can head to Café Kipferl in Camden Passage. It’s called ‘Glow ’and is available now.Īt Café Ufer in Hamburg-Eimsbüttel both red and white Glühwein will be served during Advent. Weingut Altenkirch, a well-known and respected Riesling producer in the Rheingau, looked across the border and has bottled a Riesling/Traminer blend, infused with star anise, cardamom, orange, cinnamon and bay. While across Germany, Glühwein is mostly made from red wine, the Austrians are quite partial to Weisser Glühwein, made from white wine and with slightly more emphasis on orange peel, often helped along with a little orange liqueur. Look out for them and read the back label to check for any undue ingredients – you can expect to pay about EUR 5.00 for a bottle. The overwhelmingly poor quality of cheapo-Glühwein, often with excruciatingly kitsch labels, has now spawned a wave of superior, ready-bottled Glühweins, often from good co-ops. Indeed, in some cases consumers are lucky to find real mulling spices in their hot toddy at all: unsurprisingly, poor wine quality is hidden behind large amounts of sugar and artificial flavourings. Adding sugar and fruit-juices to wine is almost like an invitation to use the most abominable plonk as a basis. Such concoctions, however, have drawn criticism: with alcohol levels between 8%and 11% one wonders what else is in there apart from wine – and where the wine is from in the first place. Aldi sells a litre-bottle or tetra-pak of ready-made Glühwein for as little as EUR 1.29 and products like these are often sold at hugemargins at Christmas markets. In 2010 Germans bought 91 million bottles of ready-made Glühwein in the shops – that makes 68.25 million litres of the stuff: all the Glühwein guzzled on all of Germany’s countless ChristmasMarkets, office parties and seasonal concerts is not even included in this figure. Very basic Glühwein is big business – both at Christmas markets and in retail. That’s how it should be: it simply is in the DNA of Germans to crave Glühwein – a visit to the Weihnachtsmarkt wouldn’t be complete without it and it has been the making of many a great Christmas party. Make a small batch for yourself and curl up with a mug on the couch under an electric blanket (because duh), or whip up a batch for a group of friends to fuel the animosity as you play board games like Cards Against Humanity.There is nothing that spells Advent more than steaming cups of Glühwein – or mulled wine: the heady scent of cinnamon, clove and citrus intensified by their infusion in gently heated red wine. People were very skeptical at first - warm wine?! But it was a big hit and a great cozy drink for a winter party. I whipped up a big batch for a holiday party we had at our place in a big pot and all that was left at the end of it was remnants of cinnamon sticks and star anise. And once we got home, I was dying to replicate the recipe myself. The traditional version is the red vin brulè, but I was most intrigued (and drank the most of) the white version, which they served with amaretto and apple. Italians love their wine, and they don't make exceptions for their mulled wine. But I had never had warm wine until we started going to the Christmas markets in Italy, where everyone is sipping on mulled wine - they call it glühwein in Germany, or vin brulè in Italy. Cheap or inexpensive (sorry, I won't shell out an arm and a leg for wine).
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