Cocktails with Christie: Inspiration & Blackberries

Inspiration: Recently(ish), I travelled to Golden, Colorado — the home of Coors Beer. Though I’m not the biggest ale aficionado, I did see the potential fun in touring this giant brewery and sipping the (undoubtedly) freshest batch of beer brewed by them I’d ever encountered.

Then my body met the mile-high altitude of Golden. 

Anyone who watches sports like soccer, American football, cycling, baseball, and many others often listens to commentators expound upon how the thinner air affects the distance a ball travels, an athlete’s endurance, and the risk of altitude sickness. So it came as no surprise when I started huffing and puffing whilst walking around town wearing fifteen pounds of camera gear on my back for the first day or two.

What I was unprepared for was how the thinner atmosphere affected my ability to eat and drink.

If the meal was much larger than a sandwich, my tummy had a hard time and alcohol was utterly off the table. Happily, according to a server I spoke to about this odd phenomenon, I wasn’t the lone ranger in this digestive experience. Thus, explaining why nearly every menu I read offered a pretty good selection of mocktails to sample.  

Inspired by these tasty drinks, I started experimenting with flavors in hopes of creating my own mocktail! (Once I made it back home, of course.)

My Recipe: Blackberry Simple Syrup

  • 4 heaping cups of black berries (fresh or frozen, doesn’t matter)
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 4 limes zested & juiced
  • 2-3 one inch knuckles of fresh ginger (peeled)
  • 1 cup unsweetened blueberry juice
  • 1/2 cup water
  • Equipment: Saucepan, potato masher, trivet, wire fine mesh strainer, ladle, canning funnel, and large mason jar*

    1. Chuck everything into a pot & stir until the sugar is dissolved. If using frozen berries: place on low heat until they thaw out and soft.

    2. Using a potato masher, mash the berries until they are all broken apart

    3. Bring everything to a boil, whilst stirring frequently (it can boil over at this point and make a mess, so keep an eye on it)

    4. Let it boil for a minute or two, then reduce heat until it’s barely simmering

    5. Continue to simmer until it reaches the desired thickness. I usually let it go for about 20, maybe 30, minutes 

    6. Whilst simmering, grab your ladle, strainer, canning funnel, and mason jar*, stacking the last three items together in that order

    7. Pulling the pot off the stove and making sure it sits on a trivet, taking care because the stuff is hot, start ladling the syrup through the strainer. Whilst carefully and gently swirling/pressing the mixture through the sieve until only the solids remain, then discard. (Picking out the ginger and cinnamon right away & discarding.)

    8. Repeat this last step until you’ve emptied the pot. However, when you finish, do not scrape the bottom of the sieve into the syrup. All those little bits will make the final product less than smooth.

    Add a couple of tablespoons of the chilled syrup (depending on your preference) to sparkling water & maybe some ice, and voila, a mocktail is born. (Or add a couple of tablespoons to a tart lemonade and a shot of peach vodka and you’ve a nice alcoholic drink — when you are back at sea level.) Keep it in the refrigerator and it should last for about two weeks.

    *You don’t have to use a ladle, canning funnel, or large mason jar. You could just as easily place the sieve over a bowl and use a measuring cup to strain the bits from the syrup and then pour it into whatever container you’ve on hand.

    PPS: Wear an apron and/or avoid wearing white when making the syrup, as it can and will stain if it gets on your clothes. Ask me how I know.

    Christie’s Canon of Characters: Honestly, I can easily see Miss Marple making this! The non-alcoholic version for a fete of some sort (as I think it could make an excellent punch, though I’ve not tried turning it into such), or making a glass full at a time on a hot summer’s afternoon! It might even be sophisticated enough for Poirot to try, if elegantly garnished and presented in a posh enough glass. Or, frankly, any of Christie’s detectives I think would order this — if they wanted to look off their game or blend into a party without impairing their deductive skills!

    My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2025

    Cocktails With Christie: Blood Orange Negroni

    Inspiration: Perusing one of my favorite baking magazines a few months back, they advertised an upcoming cocktail book that looked interesting — Holiday Coupetails. Trusting the editors of Bake From Scratch, I gave the book a go…and am delighted that I did.

    Not only does Holiday Coupetails have drink recipes, but it also gives instructions on how to make the garnishes and some fun, festive nibbles!

    Even better, Hoffman and Bell (the authors) give the basic recipe for said drink garnishes, allowing you to dress them up as you see fit. This focus on the basics is a refreshing change from the recipes for things like dried citrus peels you find on the internets, which tend to be either overly complicated or assume you’ve got specialized equipment (like a dehydrator).

    In any case, this cocktail turned out great! On my second try….

    Learn From My Mistakes: When making it, do not put in an equal amount of blood orange juice to that of the other ingredients. The extra sweetness totally flattens the taste of the Campari and makes the cocktail somewhat dull. As they instruct in the book — a single squeeze is enough!

    Christie: This is a drink I could see Poirot or Mr. Satterthwaite enjoying — as it is both bitter, sweet, and sophisticated. More importantly, since one version or another of this cocktail has been around since the 1920s, it means either gentleman could easily have ordered a negroni on their travels.

    Cooking With Christie: Crockpot Fiesta Chicken & Black Beans

    Inspiration: If you read last week’s Cooking With Christie post, you know I (after a couple of months of trying to keep the house cool) was finally able to fire up my oven and bake all kinds of stuff. Whilst I was scratching this itch, I also fired up my crockpot — so I could maximize my time in the kitchen. (Which always makes me feel accomplished at the end of the day.) I also had in my possession a can of Heyday Canning Co.’s enchilada black beans I wanted to try out.

    (BTW: I am not getting paid to advertise the product; I just found it at a grocery store and discovered I love it!)

    So I fired up my phone and found this recipe on Spruce Eats….And it is excellent!!! Quick and easy to assemble, it’s a great make ahead meal. Even better, the spices from the black beans and what the recipe calls for hold up well to the low and slow cooking time for this dish. (Which does not always happen.)

    My Helpful Hint: Because canned food often contains A LOT of salt, I suggest using no-salt-added canned tomatoes & corn – or – better yet, using fresh tomatoes to help cut it out. (Because you can always add salt if you want, but taking it away isn’t as easy.) And a squeeze of lime juice.

    Why? Because the best way to eat this dish, my husband and I found, was to melt some cheese on top and eat it with corn chips! Which adds more than enough salt to the dish!

    Christie: I can totally see Tuppence making a version of this recipe when her kids were young so they could get their veggies and she didn’t need to spend all day in the kitchen!

    My 52 Weeks With Christie: A.Miner©2023

    Cooking with Christie: A Chocolate Covered Outtake

    Here’s the final product of my chocolate coffee truffle recipe! Aren’t they shiny! (There’s a couple of filled hedgehogs in there, they turned out fine, but were a hair shallow for filling with ganache!)

    Cocktails With Christie: Clarified Milk Punch

    Inspiration: One day, whilst wandering down a rabbit hole of tangentially related shows on my cable box’s menu screen, I stumbled upon Alton Brown’s show Good Eats — not the original version but The Return.

    And I’m hooked!

    His blend of history, skits, culinary hints-tips-& tricks, and very clear recipe walk-thrus made me an instant fan.

    Now, while binge-watching Good Eats The Return, our host featured a low-ABV beverage my husband and I found fascinating — A Clarified Milk Punch. (Don’t know what low ABV is? click here to find out.) Generally speaking, neither of us are fond of mixing alcohol with moo-juice. However, we figured if Charles Dickens enjoyed the beverage — we might as well.

    At this point, after watching ‘Holiday Spirits’ again and locating the written recipe on Alton Brown’s website, we had a good-ish handle on the process of making this fortified punch.

    Now I say process, because one of the key ingredients is an Allspice Dram, which, unless you’ve got the address of one heck of an eclectic liquor store in your hip pocket, you’ll need to make it yourself. But don’t fret. It’s a straightforward recipe but takes ten days to steep properly.

    After we finished creating the dram and swearing a bit, plus some spillage, we managed to produce a punch that looked exactly like the one Mr. Brown made!

    And it’s delicious!

    Helpful hint: In Alton Brown’s demonstration, he’s got a colossal sized sieve, industrial-sized coffee filters, and a large container to strain the milk punch through.

    We didn’t have any of those things.

    So we came up with a workaround, which calls for two regular-sized metal sieves, several standard coffee filters, and a canning funnel. And set it up like the picture below.

    Now here’s the trick, you only pour a potion of the curdled mixture into the sieve at a time — careful not to fill the sieve above either the line of the coffee filter or the edge of the canning funnel. Otherwise, you’ll end up with the unfiltered liquid on your counter or small bits of milk stuff in the punch mixture.

    Ask me how I know.

    After the first small bit filters through, you top up your contraption again, again, and again until all you’re left with is a clear cranberry-colored liquid!

    Learn From My Mistake: This will take some time as the filter grows slower and slower with each pour. However, unless you’ve got another two sieves sitting around, don’t give in to temptation and change out the coffee filters. Inevitably you’ll get a bit of milk stuff into your perfectly clear punch, which will force you through the whole process again!

    Christie: I can see the Grande Dame herself enjoying this punch during the festive season! I think even Poirot and Miss Maprle would appreciate a small sip of this low-ABV drink if it appeared on a drinks table!

    The finished product is so very lovely!

    Cocktails With Christie!

    This Week’s Recipe: Grenadine

    Inspiration: As I’ve written about before, I’ve got a stupid allergy to sulfur, and it pops up in the strangest places. The newest substance to contain this bright yellow chemical element — grenadine!

    Since it called for in many drinks, I’d resigned myself to a series of disappointing Malibu Sunrises, Bomb Pops, and Cherry Bombs…

    …Until, surprise, surprise, a book came to the rescue!

    In Tequila Mockingbird, it had a recipe for grenadine! Which is dead simple to concoct and lasts for ages.

    (BTW – these literary punny drinks are a lot of fun to make and drink. Plus, the book gives additional recipes for mocktails and some interesting recipes for accompanying nibbles — all still literarily themed. Tequila Mockingbird would make a great gift to someone who loves reading and the occasional libation!)

    Christie: This reminds me of Miss Marple (as portrayed by Geraldine McEwan) from the television when she made her own sweet sherry. And while I won’t give out bottles of grenadine as presents, it still reminds me of our beloved sleuth!

    Cocktails With Christie!

    Inspiration: The Poisoner’s Cabinet

    You need to give the Poisoner’s Cabinet podcast a listen! It is absolutely splendid. Pairing classic, obscure, and occasionally original cocktails with vintage crimes from around the world. (The most recent crime they’ve covered on the main episodes so far was in the eighties….Which is a disturbing number of decades in the past.) 

    I absolutely love our irreverent hosts Sinead and Nick. When telling the tales of poison, murder, and mayhem, they don’t celebrate the perpetrators, they empathize with the victims and point out the failings or successes of the police, doctors, vicars, and others around these crimes. 

    Now a word of warning, the first season focuses exclusively on classic poisoning cases, which with the built-in framework of the episodes, does get a bit samey sounding. However, starting in season two, while giving poisonings pride of place when covered — they branch out to historically macabre, odd or mysterious murders.

    In any case, both Sinead and Nick often have pre-cocktail cocktails before starting to record their podcast and one of their favorites is a Negroni. 

    Negroni Recipe: 1 oz. Campari

                                1 oz. Gin

                                1 oz. sweet vermouth 

                                Stir together and enjoy!

    So my husband and I decided to try it out.

    On the first sip, my tastebuds asked me why I suddenly hated them, as the drink was seriously bitter. (My usual cocktail is two ounces of peach vodka, an ounce of raspberry liquor, six splashes of peach bitters, and a dash of Luster a non-alcoholic alcohol, all of which I top off with lemonade. Not overly sweet, but by comparison is practically a syrup.)

    But we’re not quitters.

    Running around our local co-op a couple of weeks later, we came across a box of premixed cocktails, which has helped us overcome the bitterness hurdle! And we now mixed Negroni cocktails with impunity!

    Christie: Honestly, I can see Mr. Harley Quin sipping a drink like this since love can be both bitter and sweet.