Brew Recipe: Lambswool Wassail

Mugs of lambswool wassail.

(Mugs of Lambswool Wassail. Photo by Jereme Zimmerman)

Wassail! Whassat? We’ll tell you! From brewing genius Jereme Zimmerman, we have another out-of-the-barrel brew for you to try at home. Especially on those colder nights.

This recipe is an excerpt from Brew Beer Like a Yeti by Jereme Zimmerman and has been adapted for the web.


Winter festivities were always a good excuse to drink ale, both for warmth and to pass the time with food, friends, and family while the land was hard with frost. One festive health-drinking tradition that is still alive in some communities today is the wassail. A wassail (stemming from the Old Norse ves heill, or “be healthy”) is an activity, toast, drink, and the drink’s receptacle all in one. On New Year’s Day (although sometimes during the time between Yule and New Year’s Day) revelers would go through the village and enter their friends’ houses unannounced, bearing a wassail-bowl of spiced ale—singing carols and presenting wishes or a year of good health by exuberantly exclaiming wassail! as the bowl was held up, drunk from, and passed along. It was then expected that each household contribute to the festivities by adding its own brew to the bowl and then joining the throng as it moved on to the next house. There are many, many wassail songs celebrating all of the aspects of life for which good health and cheer are offered.

Pot of Wassail

A pot of wassail. Photo by Jereme Zimmerman

Nearly every household had its own wassail recipe, which could vary quite a bit. In general, the drink was warm and spiced with exotic flavorings. It could range from a mulled wine, to a mulled mead, to a spiced ale or cider, to any combination of these. Often it was a bragot (a spiced honey ale—see chapter 9), although the bragot wasn’t always made with fermented honey, or even spiced at brewing. Sometimes the honey and spices were added later, after the ale was warmed. The wassail-bowl didn’t always consist of liquid nourishment only; a version known as lambswool was made by sprinkling apples with sugar, grated nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger, and other spices, then roasting them until soft. The skins were removed from the apples, warmed ale was poured over them, and everything was blended into a puree. The bowl was then served while still warm, often with spiced sweet cakes or toast floating on it. I have come across claims that to offer a drink as a “toast” came from this tradition but have been unable to verify it. Still, it’s a worthy concept to consider.

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

6 apples
1 teaspoon each freshly grated nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, ginger, or any other spices that suit your fancy
1⁄2 cup (125 mL) organic cane sugar or brown sugar
1 cup (250 mL) water (or substitute hard cider, ginger beer, red wine, Madeira, port, mead, or what-have-you)
1 small lemon or orange
4 pints low-to-no-hopped ale, preferably British-style ale, spiced dark ale, or bragot
Dark rum, brandy, or other spirits (optional)

Procedure

  1. Core the apples and place them in a pot or deep baking dish.
  2. Sprinkle the spices and sugar and pour the water or what-have-you over the apples.
  3. Squeeze the juice of the lemon or orange (or both) over everything.
  4. Place a pot on a medium-high burner, or put a baking dish into the oven at 350°F/180°C.
  5. Cook for about 45 minutes or until the apples are soft and mushy.
  6. Remove from the heat and allow the apples to warm enough to carefully remove their skins.
  7. Once the skins are removed, take a masher, large fork, or blender and blend everything (including the ale) into a puree (for the lambswool option; otherwise, remove the apples and make them into boozy applesauce).
  8. Place the lambswool in a bowl with a serving spoon, or ladle it into individual mugs.
  9. Optional: Add as much additional dark rum, brandy, or other spirits as you desire; I like to keep this going for several days by continuing to add various drinks and spices to it and rewarming it.
  10. Wassail!

Recommended Reads

Brew Recipe: Lambswool Wassail

Ode to Campari (Plus a Recipe for Vodka Negroni!)

Read The Book

Brew Beer Like a Yeti

Traditional Techniques and Recipes for Unconventional Ales, Gruits, and Other Ferments Using Minimal Hops

$24.95

Enter your email to sign up for our newsletter and save 25% on your next order

Recent Articles

Wood-fired Pizza Oven

Winter Pizza Duo Using a Sourdough Starter

Turn any night into pizza night! This sourdough pizza holds the secret to a stress-free weeknight dinner. Make the crust ahead of time and let it rise in the fridge. By dinnertime all you’ll need to do is shape the dough, add your toppings, and bake! This excerpt is from The Occidental Arts and Ecology…

Read More

A Gift From the Gods: Blue Corn Bread

A sweet cornbread made with blue cornmeal draws on traditional Mexico and US Southwest flavors. The blue cornmeal gives its haunting flavor and lavender hue.

Read More

Understanding The Etymology of Stocks and Broths

The importance of a good stock has been overshadowed by convenience. Now you have a better chance of finding quality ready-made stocks from a trusted source.

Read More
seed detective

Becoming A True Seed Detective: Mastering the Mission

Did you ever wonder how leeks, kale, asparagus, beans, squash, and corn have ended up on our plates? Well, so did Adam Alexander, otherwise known as The Seed Detective.  The following is an excerpt from the The Seed Detective by Adam Alexander. It has been adapted for the web. My Seed-Detective Mission Crammed into two…

Read More
stew

How to Make Groundnut Sweet Potato Stew

It’s officially stew season! Warm yourself up from the inside out by making groundnut sweet potato stew, a favorite of fermentation revivalist Sandor Katz. The following is an excerpt from Wild Fermentation by Sandor Katz. It has been adapted for the web. Fermenting Sweet Potatoes for Stew MaxZine, who lives down the road at IDA,…

Read More