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Glogg

Glogg

Glogg is a type of mulled spiced wine that is popular in Sweden during the winter months. It is made by heating red wine and adding a variety of spices, such as cinnamon, cardamom, cloves and ginger. Glogg can also be made with white wine or cider. It is usually served warm and garnished with raisins and almonds. 

Glogg is the perfect drink to enjoy on a cold winter night. It is sure to warm you up from the inside out!

A traditional Glogg recipe calls for:

  • 1 bottle of red wine
  • 2 cups of water
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1 orange, sliced
  • 1 lemon, sliced
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 10 whole cloves
  • 3 cardamom pods
  • 1 inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated

To make the glogg, combine all of the ingredients in a pot and stir over low heat until the sugar has dissolved. Then, turn up the heat and bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce the heat and let the drink simmer for about 10 minutes. Be sure to taste it and adjust the spices as necessary.

After the mulled spiced wine has simmered for 10 minutes, remove it from the heat and let it sit for a few minutes so that the spices can infuse the wine. Then, ladle the glogg into glasses and enjoy! Cheers!

Port Wine Gluhwein

Port Wine Gluhwein

Port wine gluhwein is a unique and excellent take on gluhwein, or mulled spiced wine. We can always count on the English to have a good time, which is why the history of Port wine has its origins there. English merchants transporting wine out of Portugal added brandy to the wine in order to keep it from degrading during export. This is how port wine got its name and reputation as a strong drink. The British continued to enjoy port wine throughout the years, and it eventually became a symbol of status and wealth. 

The addition of brandy stops the fermentation process by killing yeast and capping the sugar level of the wine. This helps preserve the wine for longer periods and also creates a sweater, more potent beverage.

For this reason, making Gluhwein with Port Wine is an excellent alternative to traditional wines. It allows you to dramatically reduce or eliminate all together the sugar content. Traditional Gluhwein recipes call for at least 1/2 cup of sugar. 

What is Gluhwein?

Glühwein (pronounced glue – vine), mulled wine, mulled spiced wine, or Glogg are all variations on the same beverage – heated wine seasoned with sweet and aromatic spices. These spices include, to name a few, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, orange, and allspice.

There are many recipes for Glühwein, but the traditional Glühwein recipe calls for heating wine with sugar and spices. Wine is simmered with cinnamon sticks, cloves, citrus peel, cardamom pods and sugar. The addition of these warming spices makes Glühwein the perfect drink for chilly winter evenings.

Although red wine is traditionally used, one can substitue fruit wines to bring out a different flavor profile and even Port wine to create a mulled spiced wine that’s healthier by skimping or cutting out the sugar all together.

Making Gluhwein with Port wine is easy, and all you need to do is substitute the wine and only use sugar to taste. The brandy fortified Port wine already is a more naturally sweetened beverage so you can add dashes, not cups of sugar to your recipe. Besides changing the wine and the sugar, the rest of the ingredients remain the same. 

The final beverage will take on the characteristics of Port wine, lush, thick, complex and full of flavor, especially when combined with spices.

Recommended Port Wines

There are two main types of Port wine – Tawny and Ruby.


Tawny port is a type of port wine that has been aged in wooden barrels, often for decades. This exposure to oxygen gives tawny port its characteristic brownish color. Although tawny port is initially quite sweet, the aging process causes some of the sweetness to be replaced by more complex flavors.

Ruby port is a type of port wine that has not been exposed to oxygen during aging. As a result, it retains its deep red color. Ruby port is usually sweeter and less complex than tawny port.

When choosing a port wine for your gluhwein, we recommend going with a tawny port. The added complexity from the aging process will add an extra dimension of flavor to your gluhwein. 

Port Wine Gluhwein Recipe

  • 1 bottle Port win
  • Dash sugar to taste
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 1 orange, sliced
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 6 whole cloves
  • 8 allspice
  • 1 star anise (optional)

Steps to make Port Wine Gluhwein:

1. Put all of the ingredients into a pot over med-low heat and stir until the sugar has dissolved. 

2. You want to ensure your gluhwein is piping hot before serving. 

3. The best method of determining if the wine is hot enough is the ol’ finger test. Stick a finger in and if the gluhwein is hot, you’re good. 

A note here. PLEASE DON’T BE SILLY. DON’T BURN YOURSELF BECAUSE THAT CAN HAPPEN. This temperature range help release the aromas of the spices without making the drink too hot. You also don’t want it burning the roof of your mouth off. 

4. At that point, turn off the heat and let the mixture steep for about 10 minutes.  This will give time for the ingredients to mix and meld.

5. You can then either strain it or serve it as is. 

6. If you want to keep it warm, put it back on the stove over low heat. 

7. Serve in mugs or glasses with pitted cherry, orange, or cinnamon stick

Cherry Wine Gluhwein

Cherry Wine Gluhwein

One recipe I traveled to the Midwest to find is cherry wine gluhwein. I discovered a perfect compliment in the cherry wines of Door County, WI. Plus, a fruit wine will cut down or eliminate the amount of sugar you need to add, depending on the sweetness of the wine. 

The best Gluhwein recipes live in the heads of those stirring steaming wine in blackened pots at Christmas Markets throughout Europe. That’s why I went to those markets and did the thankless research of stumbling my way through wooden stalls and drinking at Apres Ski parties to bring you the recipes you can’t find anywhere else. 

For me, Wisconsin is home, so finding a way to incorporate wines of that type into a beverage I spent years thanklessly traipsing across Europe to research via diligent consumption sessions next to open fires, singing carolers, and against cold nights seemed like an essential.

What is Cherry Wine?

Cherry wine is a type of wine made with cherries. The process for making fruit wines is similar to that of grape wines, but with a few key differences. First, the fruit is crushed and the juice is extracted (usually through pressing). Then, yeast is added to begin the fermentation process. Once fermentation is underway, the new wine must be aged before it’s bottled and ready to drink. 

Cherry wine can be made with any type of cherry, but is most commonly made with sour cherries. Cherry wine has a long history and was mentioned in the Old Testament. The ancient Greeks also made cherry wine.

Cherry wine is made by crushing cherries and fermenting the juice. The fermentation process can take several weeks or months. After fermentation, the cherry wine is often aged in barrels for a year or more.

Cherry wine has a deep red color and a tart, fruity flavor. It is typically sweeter than other types of wines, but this varies depending on the type of cherry used and the fermentation process. 

Gluhwein Recipe

Just follow a traditional gluhwein recipe, using cherry wine in place of the red wine. You can use any type of cherry wine you like, but we recommend something semi-sweet or sweet for best results. One of the wines mentioned above will work perfect. When selecting a fruit wine, just make sure it is not too sweet. You want the German gluhwein to have a balance of sweetness and acidity. 

For a fruit wine Gluhwein, you’ll need:

  • 1 bottle Cherry wine
  • Sugar to taste
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 1 orange, sliced
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 6 whole cloves
  • 8 allspice
  • 1 star anise (optional)

Steps to make Gluhwein

1. Put all of the ingredients into a pot over med-low heat and stir until the sugar has dissolved. 

2. You want to ensure your gluhwein is piping hot before serving. 

3. Heat to a simmer. Do not bring to a boil or that will mess with the wine.

4. At that point, turn off the heat and let the mixture steep for about 10 minutes.  This will give time for the ingredients to mix and meld.

5. You can then either strain it or serve it as is. 

6. If you want to keep it warm, put it back on the stove over low heat. 

7. Serve in mugs or glasses with pitted cherries, or something real fun and spicy, like a boozy Amarena or bourbon cherry. *Chef’s kiss.

Best Red Wine for Glühwein

Best Red Wine for Glühwein

Summary:

When choosing a red wine for your Glühwein, look for something that is fruity and not too tannic. The best wine for Glühwein is a sweet red wine. I like to avoid full bodied, dry red wines. Here is a list of other good varietals to try:

  • Black Box Sweet Red
  • Franzia Sunset Blush
  • Dornfelder
  • Malbec
  • Garnacha
  • Lambrusco
  • Zinfandel
  • Shiraz
  • Pinot Noir
  • Port 

Best Red Wine for Glühwein

Glühwein (pronounced glue – vine), mulled wine, mulled spiced wine, or Glogg are all variations on the same theme – heated wine seasoned with sweet and aromatic spices. These spices include, to name a few, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, orange, and allspice.

There are many recipes for Glühwein, but the traditional Glühwein recipe calls for heating wine with sugar and spices.  Wine is simmered with cinnamon sticks, cloves, citrus peel, cardamom pods and sugar. The addition of these warming spices makes Glühwein the perfect drink for chilly winter evenings.

While Glühwein is typically made with red wine, white wine or rosé can also be used. For a non-alcoholic Glühwein, try using apple cider or apple juice as your base.

Wine for Glühwein

While Glühwein is typically made with red wine, white wine or a rosé can also be used. The wine you choose is essential to good Glühwein.  You want a wine that is high in sugar content so it will be sweet, but not too sweet. A wine with good acidity is also important as it will help to balance the sweetness of spices like cinnamon and orange, which you will add to Glühwein.

I tend to stay away from dry, full bodied wines like Cabernet Sauvignon, as they can make the Glühwein too astringent.

It’s a common misconception that you need good wine in order to make Glühwein. That’s not true. Of course, good wine makes everything better, but because we’re so heavily changing the flavor by adding flavor forward spices using a good wine doesn’t make sense. 

Save the good wine for the guests. In my experience, and my research around the world has been extensive, Glühwein is best made with a cheap red wine. 

Use Franzia. Or a similar sweet, boxed red wine. Black Box wine is a good choice too.

No joke. Slap that bag. The best wine for Glühwein is a sweet, cheap red wine. 

You’re going to season the wine heavily with aromatic and sweet spices that overpower the wine’s original flavor. No need to get fancy and show off your sommelier wine picking skills here.

Red Wine for Glühwein

When choosing a red wine for your Glühwein, look for something that is fruity and not too tannic. The best wine for Glühwein is a sweet red wine. I like to avoid full bodied, dry red wines. If you can’t stomach Franzia or the like, here is a list of other good varietals to try:

  • Dornfelder – Dornfelder is a German red wine that is known for its sweetness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Blaufrankisch – Blaufrankisch is an Austrian red wine that is known for its fruity flavor. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Zweigelt – Zweigelt is an Austrian red wine that is known for its fruity flavor. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Garnacha – Garnacha is a Spanish red wine that is known for its fruity flavor. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Merlot – Merlot is a French red wine that is known for its smoothness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Pinot Noir – Pinot Noir is a French red wine that is known for its smoothness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Shiraz – Shiraz is an Australian red wine that is known for its spiciness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Lambrusco – Lambrusco is an Italian red wine that is known for its sweetness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein.
  • Zinfandel – Zinfandel is an American red wine that is known for its fruity flavor. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein. 
  • Port – Port is a Portuguese red wine that is known for its sweetness. It can be a good choice for making Glühwein. 

These are some of the best red wines that you can use to make Glühwein. Each wine has its own unique flavor that can add something special to your Glühwein. Choose the wine that you think will taste the best and enjoy!

German Glühwein

Glühwein is not a complicated drink to make. But, traditional Glühwein is challenging to perfect. Today you don’t have to go to Germany to enjoy the glow of a cup of Glühwein. You can make your own using the curated Boozn’ Sam’s Glow cocktail kit, or track down the supplies on your own. 

The special Boozn’ Sam’s seasoning in our glow kit isn’t for sale anywhere else and took years of diligent research amongst wooden stands and blackened kettles through places like Austria, Germany, Finland and Sweden.

Let’s Go Wassailing: Exploring Wassail

Let’s Go Wassailing: Exploring Wassail

Wassail is a mulled spiced beverage made with mulled cider and spices. The drink is heated and served in a mug. Wassail has a long history and was originally made as a way to toast to good health. The word “wassail” comes from the Old Norse ves heill, meaning “be of good health.” 

This history led the drink to become a toast, to become a song. “Here We Come A-Wassailing” is a traditional English Christmas carol. It’s essentially a song about a bunch of drunk English folk pushing back Wassail until they’re tipsy and walking the streets singing about how they are drunk and spreading cheer. 

I’m not going to post the lyrics here. That’s a waste of time and space. Instead check out this version on Youtube from The Eggnoggins of Skagit County. It’s phenomenal.

That song also became a song you might more easily recognize. The watered down, PG, non-alcoholic, kiddy cocktail version called “Here we go a Caroling.” Way less fun and tied to awkward treeing and holiday family gatherings everywhere, which could have been eliminated by consuming Wassail.

Wassail is also the name of a Wassailing ceremony, which is still practiced in some parts of England. The Wassailing ceremony is a way to bless the apple trees and ensure a good harvest. 

The delicious beverage is traditionally drunk during the Christmas season, but can be enjoyed any time of year. Wassail is a delicious and festive drink that is perfect for the holiday season. Made with mulled cider and spices, this cheery drink is heated and served in a mug. 

Wassail Recipe

Wassail can be made with different types of alcohol, but cider is the most common. Wassail can also be made without alcohol by substituting cider with apple juice. It’s is a festive drink perfect for holiday gatherings. 

Ingredients:

– 1 gallon apple cider

– 1 cup sugar

– 1 orange, sliced

– 1 lemon, sliced

– 2 cinnamon sticks

– 10 whole cloves

– 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

Instructions:

1. In a large pot, combine the apple cider, sugar, orange slices, lemon slices, cinnamon sticks, cloves and nutmeg. 

2. Heat over medium heat until simmering. 

3. Ladle into mugs and enjoy! Wassail can also be served cold if desired. 

Enjoy this delicious and festive drink this holiday season! This drink is sure to warm you up on a cold winter day. Get out there and get singing. Here we go A-Wassailing!

What is Gluhwein

What is Gluhwein

TLDR:

Gluhwein (pronounced glue — vine), mulled wine, mulled spiced wine, or Glogg are all variations on the same beverage — heated wine seasoned with sweet and aromatic spices. These spices include, to name a few, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, orange, and allspice.

There are many recipes for Glühwein, but the traditional Glühwein recipe calls for heating wine with sugar and spices.  Wine is simmered with cinnamon sticks, cloves, citrus peel, cardamom pods and sugar. The addition of these warming spices makes Glühwein the perfect drink for chilly winter evenings.

While Glühwein is typically made with red wine, white wine or rosé can also be used. For a non-alcoholic Glühwein, try using apple cider or apple juice as your base. Some recipes also call for adding brandy or rum to the Glühwein. 

My personal favorite is a shot of butterscotch schnapps. The flavor complements sweet red wine and doesn’t get me hammered and laying on the floor drunk listening to Frank Sinatra in an hour. I buy an extra hour of sobriety.

Whether you’re making Glühwein from scratch using one of the recipes provided here or using a Glühwein mix, the key to great Glühwein is letting the Glühwein simmer long enough to let the flavors meld.  

Glühwein is not a complicated drink to make. But, traditional Glühwein is challenging to perfect. Today you don’t have to go to Germany to enjoy the glow of a cup of Gluhwein. You can make your own using the curated Sam’s Glow cocktail kit, or track down the supplies on your own. 

The special Sam’s seasoning in our glow kit isn’t for sale anywhere else and took years of diligent research amongst wooden stands and blackened kettles through places like Austria, Germany, Finland and Sweden. 

Find recipes here:

Boozn’ Sam’s Glow

Traditional Glühwein

Wassail (UK)

Glogg (Swedish)

What is Gluhwein?

Gluhwein (pronounced glue — vine) is a spiced, hot wine that is perfect for warming up on a cold winter’s day. The wine is heated slow, typically on the stove, but also over an open fire if you want to hearken back to the original days of making Glühwein.

The word Glühwein is a combination of glühen, which means “to glow,” and wein, which means “wine.” And that’s exactly what Glühwein does to you after a few cups. It glows in your cheeks and warms you from the inside out. Another theory on the name, is that it originated from the fires that glowed in the dark, cold nights when Glühwein first appeared in kettles over open fires.

Glühwein, mulled wine, mulled spiced wine, or Glogg are all variations on the same theme — heated wine seasoned with sweet and aromatic spices. There are many recipes for Glühwein, but the traditional Glühwein recipe calls for heating wine with sugar and spices.  Wine is simmered with cinnamon sticks, cloves, citrus peel, cardamom pods and sugar. The addition of these warming spices makes Glühwein the perfect drink for chilly winter evenings.

While Glühwein is typically made with red wine, white wine or rosé can also be used. For a non-alcoholic Glühwein, try using apple cider or apple juice as your base. Some recipes also call for adding brandy or rum to the Glühwein. 

My personal favorite is a shot of butterscotch schnapps. The flavor complements sweet red wine and doesn’t get me hammered and laying on the floor drunk listening to Frank Sinatra within an hour of consumption.

Whether you’re making Glühwein from scratch using one of the recipes on Sam’s Booze or using a Glühwein mix like Sam’s Glow, the key to great Glühwein is letting the Glühwein simmer long enough to let the flavors meld.  Just ensure that when heating Glühwein you don’t let the wine boil, or it will change the flavor and alcohol content.

Good Gluhwein includes the right mix of ingredients. The best Glühwein recipes live in the heads of those stirring steaming wine in blackened pots at Christmas Markets throughout Europe. That’s why I went to those markets and did the thankless research of stumbling my way through wooden stalls and drinking at Apres Ski parties to bring you the recipes you can’t find anywhere else. 

Here are some complete recipes for traditional Bavarian Glühwein and Wassail.

The infusion of sweet and aromatic ingredients like oranges, cinnamon, alcoves overpower the wine flavor. Go with a sweet juicy wine, a light or medium bodied wine. Not something dry and full bodied.

This is less about terroir and more about experiencing a comforting, warm glass of spiced wine that hugs your tongue and plants little kisses down your throat and into your belly on a cold night. It’s the glow you’re after, the warmth in your soul that bakes out a core memory of time with family, loved ones, or friends.

We’ve got the luxury of progress to adapt the meaning of Glühwein. But, I believe the origin story of Glühwein saw a different use all together, one of survival not love. 

History of Glühwein

Gluhwein originated in Germany as a story of survival and reprisal from a hard life, a life we can’t imagine. In truth, the hot mulled spiced beverage existed centuries before making its way to Germany. But, since traditional Glühwein is synonymous with Germany that’s the history we’ll explore.

Gluhwein first noted appearance in Germany wasn’t until the early 1400s, long after the pillage and death of Julius Caesar. Still, I have to imagine it existed before documentation. Either way, during the 14th and 15th century, the demographic profile still varied from many other European countries. 

Created on nights when the heat of day escaped into the open, cloudless sky and cold set in with a harshness that numbed fingers, toes, and faces, I imagine they heated wine over fires and seasoned it for taste.

Gluhwein first noted appearance wasn’t until the early 1400s. But, I have to imagine it existed before documentation, and the first recorded mention of Glühwein anywhere in the world was from centuries before that point.

During the 14th and 15th center in Germany, it’s estimated a little over 10% of the population lived in cities or towns at that time, with the majority still living and working farms. Germany’s economy was agricultural in nature, as opposed to trade and industry. The Germanic people was spread out across large swaths of farmland throughout the country. 

Their foray into heating and drinking hot, spiced wine more than likely came about out of necessity to stay warm against the bitter cold winters versus as a social exercise. The cold and poverty of many who farmed and now found themselves restricted in movement and bound as serfs by the nobles of the time to land they originally owned would drive anyone to drink. 

Today Gluhwein, or mulled spiced wine is a memory. The heated, spiced wine is synonymous with the Christmas season, a time of love, friends, happiness, and joy. A good cup of christkindl (Christmas) Glühwein transports you into that world. Glühwein ascended in popularity through Christkindlmarkt, Christmas Markets, in Germany, places filled with holiday cheer and goodness. 

Not much is known about the first Christkindlmarkts, or Christmas markets. We do know that they served as a place for farmers to sell their goods, and for people to come together and celebrate the holiday season. Over time, these markets became more and more popular, eventually becoming the staple of German Christmas culture that we know today.

With its rich history and unique traditions, it’s no wonder that the Christkindlmarkt has become a global phenomenon. Cities big and small in Germany take their town squares hostages for several weeks leading up to and through the holiday season in this seasonal farmers market.

Just like cities large and small in the United States have farmer’s markets, so, too, do Christmas Markets pop up throughout the entire country of Germany and Europe. At any of these markets you can find a local, with a recipe probably passed down for generations, stirring a pot blackened by open flames, and filled with Glühwein.

At these markets, you can purchase everything from handmade decorations to fresh foods and Glühwein. Some of the more popular Christkindlmarkts are in the bigger cities of Germany, including Nuremberg, Munich, Heidelberg, Dresden, Berlin, Frankfurt, and more.

So if you find yourself in Germany during the holidays, be sure to check one out! And if not, don’t worry — you can always find a Christmas market near you. Just keep an eye out for the telltale signs: twinkling lights, the smell of fresh gingerbread, and the sound of holiday cheer.

Best Wine for Gluhwein

Use Franzia. Or a similar sweet, boxed red wine.

No joke. Slap that bag. The best wine for Gluhwein is a sweet, cheap red wine. 

You’re going to season the wine heavily with aromatic and sweet spices that overpower the wine’s original flavor. No need to get fancy and show off your sommelier wine picking skills here.

Go cheap and bountiful, because the final product is going to be a very drinkable, dare I saw chuggable, flavorful beverage.

The best wine for Glühwein is a sweet medium bodied red wine. I like to avoid full bodied, dry red wines. If you can’t stomach Franzia or the like, here is a list of other good varietals to try:

Dornfelder

Malbec

Garnacha

Lambrusco

Zinfandel

Shiraz

Any Blended Sweet Red 

Port 

FAQs

Is Glühwein the same as mulled wine?

Yes, Glühwein means “Glow Wine” in German. Call it Glühwein, mulled wine, or Glogg. You’re speaking the same language. 

Can you get drunk on Glühwein?

Oh yes. It might taste like heated fruit punch but it’s made with wine, which means it has alcohol. The heating occurs below the boiling point so that none of that precious alcohol is evaporated. Oh course, non alcoholic versions to exist too. That’s called Kinder punch in Germany, or kid punch. 

What is Glühwein in English?

The word Glühwein is a combination of glühen, which means “to glow,” and wein, which means “wine.” And that’s exactly what Glühwein does to you after a few cups. It glows in your cheeks and warms you from the inside out.

Is Glühwein from Germany?

Glühwein is from Germany. Glogg is from Scandinavia. Mulled Wine is a loose English translation. But, they are all the same, with slight variations. 

Glühwein Recipes

Glühwein is traditionally made with cinnamon sticks, cloves, citrus peel, cardamom pods and sugar. The addition of these warming spices makes Glühwein the perfect drink for chilly winter evenings. Below are several variations on Glühwein.

Boozn’ Sam’s Glow

Traditional Glühwein

Wassail (UK)

Glogg (Swedish)