Adélaïde Labille-Guiard’s menu
Homemade liqueur for dessert

Quince ratafia

DrinkReconstruction🍯 🍋facile30 min + 6 to 8 weeks maceration

A golden, fragrant liqueur made by macerating grated quince juice in eau-de-vie with sugar and mild spices. Prepared in quince season and left to age a few weeks.

Homemade liqueur for dessert

A golden, fragrant liqueur made by macerating grated quince juice in eau-de-vie with sugar and mild spices. Prepared in quince season and left to age a few weeks.

In late autumn, when quinces perfume the whole kitchen, I never fail to put a few bottles in reserve. One grates the fruit, collects its juice, marries it with eau-de-vie and sugar, with a stick of cinnamon and a clove—no more, art lies in measure. This liqueur improves by sleeping a few weeks in the cellar. A small glass offered to whoever comes to pose or converse, and the sitting is always the more pleasant for it.
Adélaïde Labille-Guiard
Ingredients
  • Ripe quincesfour or five (aromatic fruit)
  • Eau-de-vieone pint (maceration alcohol)
  • Sugarin proportion (sweetness)
  • Cinnamonone stick (spice)
  • Cloveone (spice)
  • Coriander seedsa pinch (flavor)
How it was made : Ratafias—domestic liqueurs made from fruit macerated in sweetened eau-de-vie—were a household skill widespread in the 18th century, recorded in collections of 'secrets' and liqueur-making. Quince, blackcurrant, cherry ('guignolet'), or angelica served as bases. Quince, astringent when raw, becomes sweet once sugared and rested.
Sources : Recueils d'office et de liqueurs de ménage, France XVIIIe siècle · Menon, La Cuisinière bourgeoise (1746)