Hot Crabby Punch

You’ll find this recipe in:

The ideals Junior Chef Cookbook

By: Sophie Kay

Milwaukee, 1977

Original Recipe:

HOT CRABBY PUNCH

YOU WILL NEED:

3-quart saucepan

liquid and dry measuring cups

measuring spoons

wooden spoon

slotted spoon


INGREDIENTS:

5 cups sweet apple cider

4 cups cranberry juice cocktail

¼ cup firmly packed light brown sugar

1 cinnamon stick

½ teaspoon whole allspice

½ teaspoon whole cloves

Apple slices and cinnamon for garnish


STEPS TO FOLLOW:

1. Measure cider, cranberry juice cocktail, brown sugar, cinnamon stick, allspice and cloves into 3-quart saucepan.

2. Place over medium-high heat and bring to a boil. (Do not cover pan.)

3. When punch begins to boil, turn heat to low and simmer 20 minutes.

4. With slotted spoon, remove spices before serving.

5. Decorate with apple slices and cinnamon sticks if you like.


About 9 cups or 12 ¾-cup servings

I haven’t made a recipe for Cloud 9 Cookery since August, but I’m back with Hot Crabby Punch from the 1977 The ideals Junior Chef Cookbook. It’s from the first cookbook I’ve ever owned, given to me by my aunt and uncle for my 7th birthday. I remember how proud I was when I made scrambled eggs for myself independently by following the recipe in the book. Try adding a dash of Worcestershire Sauce to your scrambled eggs, it’s rather tasty!

Hot Crabby Punch is actually in the Halloween Party section of the cookbook, and my friend Dean selected this recipe a few months ago. I knew I wanted to make a recipe from this book and was having a hard time deciding on one, so I handed him the cookbook a few months ago. He said he picked Hot Crabby Punch because he had some mulled wine at a party at our house once and this recipe reminded him of that night.

I made the punch for my family when we celebrated Christmas together at my brother’s house. I used my slow cooker instead of a pot on the stove, so I wouldn’t have to babysit the pot and the punch would stay warm and delicious.

My family seemed to like having Hot Crabby Punch around, so maybe making mulled warm beverages will become a new Christmas tradition. The most sound-bite friendly review was coined by my niece: “Tastes like pie!” I was told “That punch is good, Julie” a few times, “It would be good with vodka” and also “I don’t normally like warm beverages that much, but I liked it”.

 Read The ideals Junior Chef Cookbook on the Internet Archive:

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