Consider Crmas and Coquito, holiday comfort from the Caribbean diaspora – The Takeout

Posted: December 17, 2021 at 10:47 am

Photo: vm2002 (Getty Images)

As the fall turns into winter and the and the coffee shop drinks shift from pumpkin spice to gingerbread, its also time to shift from spiked apple cider and mulled wine to other boozy holiday offerings.

I know the first drink that comes to mind is eggnog, usually followed by some serious mixed reviews. Eggnog has a longstanding presence in the holiday drink pantheon, which also comes with the unfortunate title of being mass-produced (badly) in various forms. The first eggnog I ever tried was a non-alcoholic version sold in the local Winn-Dixie, and I remembered it tasting like sad milk.

The traditional recipes seem straightforward: eggs, milk, heavy cream, sugar, and bourbon. Some recipes call for grated nutmeg; others pop in a cinnamon stick at the end almost as a swizzle stick for a little zhuzh. Unlike what we find in most mass-produced versions, eggnog is supposed to be on the thicker sidemostly due the whipped egg whites folded into the mixtureand leave you feeling warm on the inside due copious amounts of brown liquor. So if you have only run up against disappointing eggnog experiences, this is a boozy treat worth making yourself at home.

If youre ready to try a new creamy, boozy drink this holiday, your first stop should be crmas. Like many other folks in the Haitian diaspora, I have a long abiding relationship with crmas. Somewhere deep in my familys many photo albums is a picture of me at a party after my first communion, flanked by two large bottles of handmade and hand-poured crmas.

I met up with a friend a few weeks back to co-work in a coffeeshop in Brooklyn, and after finding our seats she reached into her purse to pull out a party favor from her sisters baby shower, a small bottle of crmas. I may have (okay, definitely) held it in my hand like a precious gem while breaking the sound barrier with my squeals.

Crmas is not the Haitian version of eggnog. While they may both be boozy creamy holiday drinks, it kind of ends there. With the large and emphatic caveat that beloved drinks have a variety of recipes among different families, traditional Haitian crmas have some similarities, and it starts with a real coconut.

Back in the day, my mother used to grab her machete and make quick work of splitting a drained coconut into pieces, meticulously carving out the white meat from the shell. Then, she would sit me in front of a metal bowl with a multisided grater and invite me to shred. As I grew up, the pieces of coconut left un-grated got smaller and smaller, and my expectations of partaking in the libations got larger and larger.

If crmas is the Haitian delicacy, coquito is its Puerto Rican cousin. My first sip of coquito was poured from an oddly familiar reused bottle into a red Solo cup at a kickback in Flatbush. While coquito is delicious, coconut- and dairy-based just like crmas, there are some marked differences between the two.

Coquito is made with Puerto Rican rum and has some differences in flavor and texture. In order to jog my memory of the drinks characteristics, I may or may not have recently bought a coquito nutcracker from an entrepreneurial lady near the park. Tasting it was like greeting a member of my extended family, familiar yet far away.

As for crmas, my recipe, adopted from my mothers recipe, and her mothers before her, has no measurements but there are general instructions. It involves grating a coconut; adding Haitian rum, sugar, condensed milks, and flavoring; and much straining through cheesecloths. Its a labor of love that yields great results.

(If DIY is not in the cards for you this holiday then youre in luck: There are a few national brands, like Absalon, that ship crmas in various sizes to your home.)

As I was writing this, I FaceTimed my mom and convinced her to bring a few bags of coconut pieces from Florida in her carry-on this Christmas. Ill reprise my role as grater-in-chief and we can make our crmas at my home this year. And if Im feeling generous, maybe Ill pour out a few mini bottles and pass it on to friends for good tidings into the new year.

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Consider Crmas and Coquito, holiday comfort from the Caribbean diaspora - The Takeout

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