"What am I drinking?" Well, homemade St. John's wort-flavored snaps, of course!
St. John's wort grows literally like a weed over here. It has a long blooming period (from, say late June until late August) and is easily identifiable thanks to the fact that its yellow blossoms (strangely) leave you fingertips stained red/purple if you squeeze them. St. John's wort is also reputed by many to have beneficial effects on depression and/or anxiety. However, I believe that its use in flavoring vodka over here has more to do with its availability and nice flavor than any sort of homeopathic reason.
This year's batch began on a wind-swept beach on the Eastern coast of the Baltic island of Gotland in late June (coincidentally only about 20 miles south of where Ingmar Bergman was spending his last weeks at his home).
One needs about a cup of the blossoms for a bottle of vodka so I picked a few healthy plants and took them home with me.
Another shot of the blossoms and buds:
You primarily want the ready-to-bloom buds but a few open blossoms won't hurt either as long as your planning to filter the finished infusion:
Simply take the buds/blossoms and let them steep in vodka for approx. 10 days. Most Swedes recommend using a low-proof vodka for flavoring. I used 32 proof (called "brännvin" over here instead of 40% vodka). The lower proof allow simply allow one to taste more of the flavoring as it doesn't overpower as readily as 40 proof.
Almost immediately, a red/purple color begins leeching out from the yellow buds. After a night or so, the vodka is a beautiful hue of crimson.
After steeping for 10 days, filter the vodka (a coffee filter works fine) and add a touch of sugar (say, 2 sugar cubes per 750 ml bottle).
(The color, unfortunately, came out all wrong in this photo...)
Now comes the difficult part. Most people recommend allowing the flavored vodka to mellow for awhile - preferrably until next summer. Mine, however, was quickly consumed at our annual neighborhood
crawfish party ("kräftskiva") after only 6 weeks or so...
The flavor is surpisingly non-flowery. Instead, it has a fruity, berry-like flavor that is very pleasant. Honestly, my home-infusions are really no match for much of the pleathora of flavored snaps one can purchase in Sweden. However, I find the experience of flavoring one's own snaps to be well worth the effort.