Brandied Cherries

 

A perfect cherry suspended in a spiced brandy. These treasures will delight all year long, and they are one of the easiest kitchen gifts to make!

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Local is always best, of course

Make these when local cherries are ripe, firm, and beautifully colored.  If you can get them, try using a mix of sour and sweet cherries, but you can use what you like or can find. This is an update of one of my recipes because it has evolved over time. I added a bit of brown sugar last year and loved it! I also changed up the spices a bit, and didn’t bother with the step of making a simple syrup out of the brandy and sugar, I just put it all in the jar and let it work its magic without turning on the stove in the hottest part of summer! They don’t even need to be processed in a canning bath. Super simple.

Preserving perfect fruits

A cherry is one of the perfect fruits of this planet, especially if suspended in a wonderful spirit. But, please don’t do this in the middle of winter with imported cherries that have traveled an ocean and have no flavor! And always look for local, organic first. Your neighbor’s neglected tree is perfect, but you will have to be quick to beat the birds.

Two for one

I don’t know whether I like the cherries best or the deep, burgundy colored, cherry flavored liquor that is created in the process; they are inseparable to me. These cherries need to work in the spirits for many months, in fact I wouldn’t even think of tasting them until Christmas. The next Christmas, even better. They only improve with time, and will keep for years if stored in a cool, dark place.

Just don’t let the kids find them…

When they are ready, use them in lots of special ways. Place a cherry in the bottom of a flute and add a little of the cherry brandy. Fill with champagne! Put a little bit over ice cream or pound cake for a very special treat, or take out your best ornate cordial glasses, add some of the fine, newly flavored liquor and a cherry at the bottom of the glass. You can use brandy or cognac, depending on the dryness you prefer. You can change out the ratio and type of spices used, it is about what you like best. Patience here is one of the best ingredients.

A lovely starter for brunch

I frequently served these to inn guests atop a broiled grapefruit as a starter, and everyone loved the dish. Just cut the grapefruit in half, sprinkle a bit of ground fennel over each and top with a few little dollops of butter. Broil until just starting to brown on the edges and top with a brandied cherry, swirling a bit of the brandy as well. Just warn folks there is a pit inside!  The pits actually lend a lot of flavor to the finished product. 

However you make them, they are a wonderful addition to the pantry or treasured gift from your kitchen, and they are fun to make. Easy too, but don’t tell anyone. Let them just think it is sultry magic.

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Brandied Cherries are a test of patience, but you will be rewarded! I’ve used sour cherries here, but sweet is fine as well.

Brandied Cherries

The measurements do not need to be exact with this recipe. You can use just white sugar if you like, or omit the sugar altogether! I make these in a large jar and break them down for gift giving, less shaking to distribute the sugar! I found this out the hard way when I had to keep turning a bunch of little jars.

And a little note –– if you don’t like cherries, you can use this same process to preserve any fruit or berry! I’m making brandied raspberries for my daughter because she is allergic to cherries. You can use cut up peaches, plums, or apricots too.

  • 2 lbs. or so fresh cherries, sweet or sourIMG_8265
  • 750 ml. dark brandy, cognac, or armagnac 
  • 1 cup superfine organic white sugar
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • A small vanilla bean, split
  • 3 star anise pods, 4 whole cloves, 6 black peppercorns
  • 1 cinnamon stick & 1 tsp. cinnamon
  • 1 pinch salt

Prepare a two-quart canning jar and its lid by boiling for five minutes or running through the dishwasher. Set aside.

Pick over the fruit and choose only the most firm, bruise-free cherries. Make them the best. Remove any deformed or dried up stems, and trim back the rest to about an inch so you want something to hold on to.

Place a couple of layers of cherries in the bottom of your jar. Mix the two sugars together and sprinkle over a little along with a pinch of cinnamon.

Add another couple of layers and insert your vanilla bean and a cinnamon stick along with a star anise and a couple of cloves. Keep building layers of cherries, sugar, cinnamon, and the last two star anise in different layers. Once you make it to the top, add the last two cloves and a pinch of salt, then pour any unused sugars over the top.

Brandied cherries
This year’s batch waiting for its next shake up to distribute the sugar!

Add the brandy and use a long chop stick to gently move the fruit around to release any air bubbles.  Check that the brandy is over the fruit. The fruit will float at first, but if you push with the chopstick the level of brandy would be more apparent.

Wipe the rim, seal the jar, and give it a gently back and forth shake to begin dissolving the sugar.

Place in a dark, cool spot for at least four months or so. I make these cherries every year in July and don’t even think about using them until December. Most of them become gifts. Remember, this is about patience, you will be rewarded. Once a week for a month, turn the jar over a few times, and then once in a while as you remember, and remember you will, because you will be checking on them. These cherries have a way of staying on your mind. It doesn’t take long for this liquor to become deep burgundy in color, sweet and thick and cherry flavored.

Variations: I’ve made these with just sour cherries, or just sweet. I love the sour cherries with cognac and fennel seed. Play with the spicy flavors you like. If you are not fond of the sweet syrup, you don’t even really need to any sugar, just preserve the cherries in the brandy.

Notes: if you plan to make a big batch, figure on a little more than six pounds of cherries and 2 liters of spirits to make around 12 pints.

As the cherries set, more of their flavor and color gets transferred to the brandy, ultimately making it a deep wine color. After a couple of years, the cherries will lose some of their color, but the brandy will be heavenly.

I’ve no idea how long these will keep, but years rather than months, and they do not need to be refrigerated. Just store in a pantry.

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33 Comments Add yours

  1. hantimps says:

    fruit is always better with a bit of booze haha! Looks great 🙂 x

    1. Thank you so much! They are a tasty treat!

  2. chef mimi says:

    My mother used to make these, sometimes with other fruit, and she’d SERVE them to us, usually over ice cream. To this day I can’t handle anything really alcoholic, so I was always so put off by her desserts! They’re so pretty all cherries.

    1. What a story! My mother never would have dreamed of sharing hers with us, so I guess I’m lucky because I love them now!

  3. Love the use of two types of sugar, and the spices.
    Kudos for having the patience to wait 4 months for such tasty cherries, I usually succumb to eating them before such projects start! 🙂

    1. Ah, that’s why I get twice as many as I think I’ll need!

      1. Clever! 🙂

  4. Julia says:

    We picked up a bag of sweet local cherries this weekend and they are mostly gone. 😋 Your pictures of the cherries look so beautiful.

    1. Thank you! I keep a little bowl of them on the kitchen table right now, and they disappear as the day goes on…

      1. Julia says:

        🙂

  5. Sherry M says:

    this sounds delicious. yes it is all about patience isn’t it? i make grain mustard and chutneys and sauerkraut etc and they are always so much better weeks and months down the track. yum to cherries.

    1. Thank you Sherry! I haven’t made my own mustard, have you shared a recipe?

  6. A delightful pampering!👌💕🌺

    1. Yes, when you have these, it is a kind of pampering. Thanks for stopping by!

      1. No doubt!

  7. I love cherries, and these look delicious. I don’t see local cherries up here, and the ones at the store have been right at $5 a pound this year. Your family must love getting food gifts at the holiday.

    1. Thank you so much. They are at our farm stands and farmers markets right now, so lucky to have them. Love giving the gifts to them as well, and I love planning it out during the growing season.

  8. Cherries Jubilee! 🍃🍒

  9. Another good way to use these beauties. Never knew this method. Thanks for sharing

    1. Thanks for stopping by! The technique is really easy and quite forgiving! It’s also fun!

  10. Real treasures indeed! Oh, look at those cherries 🍒 😍😍😍

    1. They are! Little jewels!

  11. I know they have to be incredible! 😋

    1. Thanks! They made everyone smile!

  12. Karen says:

    I haven’t made these in years. I even have special cordial glasses that I used to serve them in to guests after a meal. I like the spices you use in yours, I bet the cherries and the brandy are a big hit with your guests.

    1. Thank you for your lovely comments! I love that you have special cordial glasses for these (I do too, little pink Depression-era glasses I love). The cherries are bountiful this year, time to make them again?

      1. Karen says:

        I agree, thanks for the inspiration.

      2. Ah, you’re welcome!

  13. Terrie Gura says:

    These sound amazing. I wish I’d seen it last summer when you first posted it, as I surely would have tried them. And the different space combinations you mention? Honestly, Dorothy, it’s like I’ve known you my whole life! Now I will be counting the days til cherry season. 🍒😁

    1. Ah Gerrie! I think we must be cousins somewhere on the family tree! The cherries have become a family tradition. I’ve made them every year for about 20 years! I hand little jars of them out at Christmas, and they are enjoyed by all –– except my daughter who is allergic to cherries. I make her brandied raspberries!

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