I Made A New Liqueur: Pineapple Sage And Lavender

The latest delicious offering from Bourbony Labs is a pineapple sage and lavender liqueur. I started the steeping process about a month ago, using fresh pineapple sage leaves and lavender flowers, leaves, and stems from our garden. Unfortunately I didn’t weigh the amounts but I would estimate four or five stems of pineapple sage, each with 12-15 leaves, and five or six clipped lavender stems that I trimmed down to size but otherwise used whole.

pineapple sage and lavender liqueur

(Interestingly, the blood orange and rosemary liqueur I made earlier this year is nowhere to be found on this site – I could have sworn I used it in a recipe or two… hmmm…)

These were placed in a large (70oz/2.1L) Mason jar with a spring lid, along with 1 liter of Cruzan Aged Light Rum and roughly a cup of Old Fourth Distillery Vodka. For a little extra zest, I added a 1/4 cup of black peppercorns. Sealed, and placed in a dark pantry for about two weeks. I’d go in every day or so and give the container a swirl. After two weeks, I added simple syrup made of 2/3 cup of white sugar and 1-1/3 cup of water. This sat for another 10 days, during which time I swirled the mixture around at least once every day or two.

The resulting liqueur is super-sweet. The steeping process gave it a nice, dark tea coloring. It has a sweet, lavender aroma with hints of pineapple and mint. On the front end, you definitely taste the lavender and, to a lesser extend, the pineapple sage. There’s a very interesting spearmint-like aftertaste that lingers on the back of the tongue.

However, as a sipper, this liqueur is much too sweet. “It’s really good, but it needs something,” as my wife said. I tried mixing it with several different spirits. It definitely goes well with a nice botanical gin. I mixed it with Old Fourth Distillery’s Atlanta-Made Gin, with which it blends very nicely. The botanicals in the gin and the botanicals in the liqueur compliment each other quite nicely. I tried a variation of this with Aperol, which also worked well.

Bourbon, on the other hand, pretty much overpowered the liqueur. I tried a standard Old Fashioned template, and was somewhat disappointed. The other liqueur I made, a blood orange and rosemary concoction, worked very well with the bourbon. This, not so much.

Because the liqueur is largely rum-based, you could mix it with rum, although I feel like that would be overkill. It might be a nice mix with vodka — I wouldn’t know, as I don’t care much for vodka so I don’t keep it around except to make liqueurs and to have vodka on hand should a guest request a vodka martini or something.

In any event, I’ll be working on a recipe or two using the pineapple sage and lavender liqueur in the coming days, so keep an eye out for them. If you want to know right away when I post a new recipe, sign up for the mailing list below and you’ll be the first to know!

Bob Sawyer

AUTHOR

Hi! I’m Bob!

If it’s got bourbon in it, I’m drinking it. And if it’s really good, I’m gonna figure out how to make it, and share it with you. Because I’m good like that.

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