Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Here, Here, to Irish Cheer!

Helloooooo!!


I believe it's been 2011 for three months now and I have not added one post since bringing in the new year. Despite my crazy semester, I am determined not to let this outlet of creativity escape, so let's cheer to la vida loca and St. Patty with a suiting recipe that my family has grown quite fond of in the past few years: Irish coffees!

The handsome couple before revisiting Buena Vista in San Fran.
My mom admitted that she didn't like whiskey until drinking
these Irish Coffees in Minneapolis.

The story begins in San Francisco, California about four years back. My family was taking a trip to celebrate Mike's graduation from high school and it just so happened to overlap with my parents 25th wedding anniversary! They took a honeymoon in San Francisco and remember visiting the Buena Vista cafe overlooking Fisherman's Warf. We went there on their anniversary eve to get an Irish coffee, a drink they are quite famous for, however, my parents had to take their coffees out into the cold wind in two parts: a disposable cup with the coffee + a small plastic bottle of whisky (since Mike and I were still too young to share in the drinking atmosphere)!


A few years later on a mild June evening Mike and I decided to surprise them with a "proper"cup before going out for dinner. I bought my first bottle of Jameson. Mike did some dark coffee roasting. Sitting around a table on a slanted porch in Mike's rented house in Minneapolis, Minnesota we brought out the "surprise" and well... three hours and a few cups later we were stumbling into a cab to grab some grub to soak up the bottle of whisky in our stomachs! Now, it is a funny family drink. We made some last Christmas morning with hand-whipped Amaretto cream (Mike's creation). I introduced them to Joe on our second annual snow day (thank you Chancellor Biddy). And now, you can make them too!


Irish Coffees (Nuss Family Style)


Brew a strong pot of a dark roasted coffee
While brewing, boil hot water and pour into glasses/mugs to heat
Whip the whipped cream with sugar (and a splash of Amaretto) until it peaks
When the coffee is done, pour the hot water out of the serving glasses/mugs
Pour a shot or two of whiskey into the glasses
Scoop equal parts sugar and stir
Pour coffee until 3/4 full and stir until sugar is dissolved
Top *carefully* with the whipped cream as to not mix with the coffee
Enjoy one a cold night, or as we do, anytime you want to get giggly!

The "key" to a perfect Irish Coffee.
As some call it, "dumb blond in a black dress."
The beauty about not mixing the cream and coffee is
that they combine perfectly when sipping.
The slower you drink, the more the layers mingle.