Fireside Tea

What is the 151 in an 151 Proof Rum

MORE

The 151 Rum like the now discontinued Bacardi 151 is an 100 Proof or overproof Rum that has an alcoholic content of over 75%. But why 151? 151 is the Octane rating of jet fuel, and 151 is the purest jet fuel. The 151 Rum indeed has the strength of pure Jet Fuel.

Fireside Tea1for Drinking Age Adultsauthentic Fireside Tea cocktail recipePT5M

Fireside Tea

Low ABV ( less than 15% ),Light and refreshing.
*Note that dilution and other factors like type and temperature of ice are not considered in this upfront calculation.

spiced rum cake or cinnamon sugar donuts

Warm, spiced, and citrusy


  • Dark Rum 3 cl
  • Hot Black Tea 15 cl
  • Lemon Wedge 1 -
  • Cinnamon Stick 1 -
  • Sugar 1 tsp


Any Glass of your Choice


Fireside Tea
fireside tea is a popular Rum cocktail containing a combinations of Dark Rum,Hot Black Tea,Lemon Wedge,Cinnamon Stick,Sugar .Served using Any Glass of your Choice
For chilly winter nights when you crave cozy solace from harsh elements outdoors, the Fireside Tea delivers liquid warmth and comfort freshly steeped. Featuring classic earl grey or English breakfast black tea simply accented by dark rum`s molasses richness, a cinnamon stick for gentle spice and fresh lemon zest to awaken your senses, it proffers profound sanctuary inside each steaming cup or mug. Sweeten gently with a teaspoon raw honey or Demerara sugar to taste. Then let aroma therapeutic vapors permeate as you regain inner harmony restoring natural balance. No hearthside required - just mix, steep and sip this curative tonic until your blood starts flowing and extremities thawing once again. The power of tea compels you!


Fireside Tea Ingredients


Dark Rum,Hot Black Tea,Lemon Wedge,Cinnamon Stick,Sugar,


Fireside Tea Recipe


Pour tea into a heat-proof goblet, and sweeten to taste. Add rum, wedge-shaped slice of lemon, and a cinnamon stick. Serve.

No Ratings Yet. Please be the first to rate this Recipe

Thank you for the Rating!

  • Dark Rum

    Dark Rums have molasses as their main ingredient, the dark liquor has a full bodied flavour of spices and caramel and is a favourite drink with Cola and is part of so many cocktails.

    The term Dark Rum is not a legal definition but it generally refers to any rum that is dark brown in appearance due to ageing or from additional molasses or caramel.

    The colour of Dark Rum varies from Gold to Black, depending on the years of ageing in the vat.

  • Hot Black Tea

    Black tea or red tea is a type of tea that is one of the oxidised roasted ways of consuming tea, it’s the most oxidised of them and is stronger in flavour than Oolong, yellow or white tea and very different from the green tea too. All teas come from the same bush called Camellia Sinensis and differ only in how they are treated.

  • Cinnamon Stick

    Cinnamon is a very popular spice used world over, obtained from the inner bark of the trees of the genus Cinnamomum. Cinnamon is used in a wide variety of cuisines, sweets, breads and tea and is a dominant flavour in Cola too. Cinnamon trees are grown for two years befiore harvesting them by cutitng the stems at ground level, leaving stumps of trunks from where new shoots grow back and the tree growns again. The cut down stems are immediately processed, the outer bark is scraped off and the stem is beaten evenly with a hammer to loosen the inner bark which is then pried off in long rolls, dried and cut into pieces for sale.
    Both Cinnamon Sticks and Cinnamon Powder is used in cocktails to add that sweet and woody flavour to the drink. Alternatively if you are not comfortable with the Powder and the recipe doesn't explicitly asks for Cinnamon Powder you can use a drop of Cinnamon Oil instead.
    Note: Cinnamon Leaf Oil has a musky and spicy scent, and a light-yellow tinge that distinguishes it from the red-brown color of cinnamon bark oil Cinnamon leaf oil is lighter, cheaper and ideal for regular use. Although cocktail creation is an art and you can experiment with both.

  • Sugar

    Brown Sugar is a sucrose sugar with a distinctive brown colour from the presence of molasses, it is a partially refined or unrefined sugar containing sugar crystals and residual molasses giving it a distinctive taste and flavour of crystallised molasses or toffee. The taste of dark brown sugar is described as a caramel taste with a deep molasses flavour.
    Brown sugar is used in cocktails where a caramel candy or toffee flavour is expected.

    Caster Sugar is finely ground granulated sugar. It is not as fine a powdered confectioners' sugar and has a little grit to it. It is somewhere between confectioners' sugar and granulated sugar, and melts in mouth with a mild spicy feel to the tongue

    Vanilla Sugar is the regular granulated sugar infused with vanilla flavour, by using vanilla pods and seeds to flavour the sugar. A home made alternative is to use vanilla sticks or pods in a jar of sugar and leave it sealed for 4 weeks to allow the vanilla flavour to infuse. Or to use granulated sugar and vanilla extract and blend in a mixer, although this ends up in powdered sugar.

"

Please Note All Recipes and Articles on this site are for entertainment and general information only. None of it is to be considered final or absolutely correct or medical in nature.
However, we have embarked on a journey of manually updating the relative strength of cocktails, their flavour profile and in the future aim at providing approximate calories per drink too.
Blue Tick Project:We aim at manually validating and verifying each cocktail in their current context and mark them as valid, where, a blue tick would mean that the recipe has been verified and is 100% accurate while an orange tick would mean the recipe has low confidence.
Where as a grey tick would mean that the recipe has not yet been manually validated or verified recently.

Note: The Cocktail photos used are graphical representations of the glass and colour of a drink, these are generated using information from the recipe and we personally strive at providing real photographs of cocktails and we hope we can replace all representational photos with real photos soon.
Contact Us using the Email Contact on the Sidebar if you think any Copyrighted photo has been unintentionally used on this site, and we'll take remedial action.
Some of the Photos are sourced from Royalty Free Photo Platforms like FreePik, Unsplash and Wikimedia Commons

SEARCH

Thank You! We shall review and publish your photo with your Social Media reference soon!

Easy Cocktail RecipesEasy Cocktail Recipes

Please confirm you are of legal drinking age in your territory. This website lists alcoholic cocktail recipes and related content.
NOTE: This website earns revenue from Advertisements, and legal erotic and legal gambling advertisements might appear on some of the pages.

NoYes I confirm