FOR JANUARY 1 THROUGH 6, SEE THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS, PAGE 367
ST. EMILION, JANUARY 7
St. Emilion (d. ca. 767) was a monk from Brittany who, after being treated unjustly at a Benedictine monastery, came to Aquitaine in southwestern France. According to one account, he promised to manage a local count’s finances but was fired for giving some of his master’s bread to the poor. Emilion decided to become a hermit and settled in a small limestone cave. He began to carve out an entire subterranean monolithic church (a church made from just one stone), a task that would take his monastic successors three centuries to complete. The amazing church, which is the largest of its kind in Europe, is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site along with the village of Saint-Émilion that grew up around the saint’s humble hermitage.
St. Emilion is also said to have discovered spring water in his cave with miraculous healing power, which was particularly useful to the pilgrims who came. Another useful service that the monks of St. Emilion provided was the wines that they produced. Today, Saint-Émilion remains one of the principal areas of Bordeaux for red wines. There are no fewer than five appellations bearing the saint’s name: Montagne-Saint-Émilion, Saint-Georges-Saint-Émilion, Lussac-Saint-Émilion, Puisseguin-Saint-Émilion, and Saint-Émilion.
Spain too honors today’s saint. The Bodegas Emilio Lustau in the Jerez region makes a fine sherry called San Emilio.
OUR LADY OF PROMPT SUCCOR, JANUARY 8
As every son and daughter of New Orleans knows right well, the patroness of their city, of the Archdiocese of New Orleans, and of the state of Louisiana is Our Lady of Prompt Succor (“quick help,” if you need a more modern idiom). It was devotion to Our Lady under this title that obtained victory for the United States during the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815. The night before the battle, the local Ursuline nuns, who had introduced this devotion to the city, prayed that if God saved New Orleans from the British, they would have a Mass of Thanksgiving celebrated every year. Their prayers were answered. Although the battle lasted roughly thirty minutes, it claimed over two thousand British casualties and only a few dozen American. General Andrew Jackson, though a Protestant, personally thanked the Ursuline nuns for their intercession. And a Mass of Thanksgiving continues to be said every year on January 8 in the Ursuline convent.
In honor of Our Lady’s speedy aid, we present a drink invented for the NOLA wedding of our friends Kevin and DeAnn Stuart: Prompt Succor Punch. Consider the play on words a reminder of how the British must have felt after the Battle of New Orleans. Herbsaint, a liqueur that originated in New Orleans, gives the punch a wry soupçon of anise. And Chartreuse is always good for the soul (see pp. 273–74).
Prompt Succor Punch
2 cups sugar
2 cups water
2 cups lemon juice
2 cups lime juice
2 cups gin
¾ oz. yellow Chartreuse
¾ oz. Herbsaint
thin slices of lemon and lime
In a saucepan, mix sugar and water and bring to a boil, stirring until the mixture is clear. Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature.
Add to a punch bowl or pitcher filled with ice, along with all the other ingredients, and stir well. Makes 8 cups.
ST. ERHARD, JANUARY 8
Little is known of St. Erhard of Regensburg or Ratisbon except that he was born in Ireland in the seventh century, came to the Continent as a missionary bishop, and founded several monasteries there, including the convent of Niedermünster in Regensburg, Bavaria.
St. Erhard is a premium German beer that comes in a clear glass bottle that reveals its luminous orange-gold color. St. Erhard is exported mostly to Asia, but if you happen to have a bottle and did not know when to drink it, your crisis is over. And any Irish or Bavarian beer would be a suitable replacement for today’s saint.
ST. HILARY, JANUARY 14 (JANUARY 13)
St. Hilary of Poitiers (300–368) is a confessor and doctor of the Church. A powerful opponent of the Arian heresy, he labored tirelessly to promote the orthodox teaching on Jesus Christ as true God and true man and was persecuted for it. A convert from neo-Platonic philosophy, he was chosen to be bishop of Poitiers even though he was married with a daughter (St. Abra).
Hilary’s name means “cheerful” in Latin, so it is difficult to resist the temptation to bend the elbow on his feast day. St. Hilary was such an effective opponent of heresy that he was known as the “Hammer of the Arians,” yet his writings are smooth and eloquent. In honor of these two qualities, we suggest a Velvet Hammer.
Wine
Hilary’s city of Poitiers is located in the region of Poitou-Charentes, which has several reputable wine-producing areas, including Vins du Thouarsais, Vins de Saumur nord Vienne, Vins d’Anjou Deux-Sèvres, and Vins du Haut-Poitou. Haut-Poitou, which has been producing wine since the time of St. Hilary and is the closest to Poitiers, was recently awarded AOC (appellation d’origine contrôlée) status. Domaine de Martinolles is a winery that keeps alive the traditions and vineyards begun by the monks of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint-Hilaire in 1531. The winery makes a number of still and sparkling wines, such as their Le Berceau Brut.
Velvet Hammer
¾ oz. vodka
1 oz. cream
¾ oz. crème de cacao, light or dark
Pour all ingredients into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass.
LAST CALL
In Catalonia, there is a toast invoking St. Hilary used throughout the year. Unfortunately, it is vulgar: “St. Hilary, St. Hilary, whoever does not empty his glass is an SOB.” (And that’s a nice translation: the Catalan is even rougher.) We were not able to find any explanation for why the saintly bishop of Poitiers was brought into this particular judgment about imperfect drinkers, but perhaps we can clean up the sentiment by replacing “SOB” with “monkey’s uncle” or “Arian heretic.”
ST. MAURUS, JANUARY 15 (OCTOBER 5)
St. Maurus was the first disciple of St. Benedict of Nursia. According to Pope St. Gregory the Great, Benedict ordered Maurus to run across the surface of a lake in order to rescue St. Placidus from drowning, which he did.
Maurus eventually founded the first Benedictine monastery in Gaul, Glanfeuil Abbey on the south bank of the Loire River near Angers. It is said that the Chenin Blanc grape, one of the most versatile in the world, was first cultivated here. It can be used to make dry white wines and sweet dessert wines, sparkling wines and fortified wines; and although it is still prized in the Loire region of France, it is also produced in California, in South Africa (where it is the most widely planted variety), and throughout the world.
Finally, the Maurus Winery in the Hungarian wine country of Mór bears the saint’s name.
If you prefer a cocktail or liqueur, you may toast this Benedictine pioneer with any of the libations poured out on the feast of St. Benedict (see p. 58–63). Or for this ideal monastic disciple, have a Monk cocktail.
Monk
1½ oz. gin
¾ oz. lemon juice
¾ oz. Bénédictine
Pour all ingredients into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass.
ST. HONORATUS, JANUARY 16
St. Honoratus (ca. 350–429) came from an illustrious pagan family in northern Gaul. After converting to Christianity, he undertook a pilgrimage with his brother Venantius to the Holy Land, but they never made it to their destination. Venantius died in Greece, and Honoratus returned to Gaul. Passing through Provence, he took up his abode in what was then the wild island of Lérins, off the bay of Cannes, in the beautiful Mediterranean Sea. (Today, the island is known as Île Saint-Honorat.) Honoratus wanted solitude, but his sanctity attracted numerous disciples, and so around 405 he founded a monastery.
The Île Saint-Honorat is still home to that monastery, although it is now called l’Abbaye Notre Dame de Lérins and has been Cistercian since the mid-nineteenth century. The monks grow eight hectares of vines that have been cultivated on the island since medieval times. They have seven world-famous vintages: Saint Salonius, Saint Lambert, Saint Césaire, Saint Sauveur, Saint Cyprien, Saint Honorat, and Saint Pierre. They also produce a number of enticing liqueurs, including a green and yellow Lérina (their answer to Chartreuse?). Best of all, if you can’t make it out to the island, you’ll be happy to know that they have a website: http://excellencedelerins.com/.
ST. ANTHONY, JANUARY 17
St. Anthony is the founder of monasticism. At the age of twenty, he walked into church just as the Gospel was being proclaimed: “If thou wilt be perfect, go sell what thou hast” (Mt. 19:21). Taking the verse as a call to himself then and there, he relinquished his possessions and took up the ascetical life. Initially he stayed near his village, residing in a tomb outside of town, where he was assaulted by the Devil in the form of terrifying beasts. Later, he withdrew into the Egyptian desert, where for twenty years he did not set sight on another human being. Eventually, however, a group of disciples gathered around him, and he agreed to become their spiritual director. He instructed this community of monks for five years and then withdrew again, spending the last forty-five years of his life as a hermit and dying at the age of 105.
Anthony’s symbol in Christian iconography is a pig, the most plausible theory being that a medieval order bearing his name (the Hospitallers of St. Anthony) was allowed the special privilege of letting its swine run free in the streets. The Pisgah Brewing Company makes a bacon stout that would be apt for the occasion, and there are also Bakon [sic] vodka and Old Major Bacon bourbon on the market. The producers of these liquors promise that their products enhance existing cocktail recipes in new and enticing ways. Further, proprietary bacon cocktails (with a slice of bacon as the garnish!) have become a trend in swank bars across the United States. Serving any of these drinks in a curved or bell-shaped glass would be a nice touch, since the bell is also a symbol of St. Anthony.
Other beer options, depending on where you live, are the products of the microbrewery Saint Antoine Abbé in Franklin, Québec. (They also make mead.)
Tequila Sunrise
4 oz. orange juice
2 oz. tequila
2 oz. grenadine
Stir the orange juice and tequila in a mixing glass filled with ice and strain into a highball glass. Add ice. Pour in grenadine slowly around the inner perimeter of the glass. The grenadine will settle to the bottom and create a sunrise effect.
LAST CALL
Since it is a universal custom to toast to someone’s longevity, on this day toast to your guests and wish them the long life of St. Anthony—and his solitude only if they want it.
Or to give a nod to St. Anthony’s time in the desert, have some tequila, a distilled spirit made from the agave plant, which grows in arid regions (see p. 323). Fine tequila, which can be sipped neat like a single-malt scotch, is a work of art, but even bottom-shelf tequila can make a decent cocktail like the Tequila Sunrise. And grenadine is made from a common Christian symbol (see p. 106).
BL. GONZALO DE AMARANTE, JANUARY 17
On the same day as St. Anthony’s feast, the Dominican order celebrates the memory of Blessed Gonzalo de Amarante (1187–1259), also known as Gonçalo or Gundisalvus. A highborn Portuguese, he entered the Dominican order but was allowed for a while to live as a hermit, during which time he built a bridge on the River Tâmega. According to one story, the laborers he had persuaded to help him ran out of wine. Worried that they would quit, he prayed and struck a rock with his staff. An “abundant supply of excellent wine” is said to have then gushed forth from a fissure.
Gather your friends together and share with them an abundance of excellent wine, toasting to Blessed Gonzalo’s admirable application of Catholic social teaching.
ST. CANUTE, MARTYR, JANUARY 18 (JULY 10)
St. Canute (1042–1086) was a king of Denmark and a generous patron of the Church. He was martyred near the altar in a chapel during a peasant uprising and became Denmark’s first canonized saint. St. Canute can be toasted with any Danish spirit, such as the aquavit Aalborg Akvavit, which is enjoyed neat or in a cocktail such as the Aquavit Fizz. The drink’s red color is a nice touch for a martyr’s feast.
Aquavit Fizz
1½ oz. aquavit
1 oz. lemon juice
½ oz. cherry liqueur (e.g., Maraschino, Heering)
1 tsp. simple syrup
1 egg white
soda water
red cherry
Pour all ingredients except soda water into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a flute glass and top with soda water. Garnish with a cherry.
Speaking of cherries, Denmark is also home to Kijafa, which makes a cherry liqueur and a delicious yet subtle Chocolate Cherry Fruit Wine Liqueur.
ST. SEBASTIAN, JANUARY 20
At your next cocktail party, you can pose to your guests the following question: Which saint was martyred twice? The answer is the reason for today’s festivity. St. Sebastian (d. 288) was a soldier in the Roman army who exhorted imprisoned Christians to stand firm in their faith despite torture and death and who was responsible for a number of conversions. He was appointed by two emperors, Diocletian and Maximian, to be captain of the Praetorian Guard, neither of them knowing that he was a Christian. When Diocletian discovered the truth, he ordered Sebastian to be bound to a tree and killed with arrows. The saint was shot so many times that his biographers say he looked like a hedgehog. Yet when a saintly widow came to bury his body, she discovered that he was alive and nursed him back to health. Undeterred, Sebastian found Diocletian and upbraided him. When the emperor recovered from his shock, he again ordered Sebastian to be executed, this time by being beaten to death with clubs. A tough saint through and through, St. Sebastian is the patron of athletes, soldiers, and archers.
The San Sebastian cocktail was most likely named after a town rather than the martyr, but it’s still a good choice. For added effect, garnish with a cherry pierced by an arrow-shaped cocktail spear.
San Sebastian
1 oz. gin
¼ oz. light rum
½ oz. grapefruit juice
¼ oz. triple sec
½ oz. lemon juice
Pour all ingredients into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass.
Wine and Beer
There are two American wineries that bear our saint’s name. Sebastiani Vineyards and Winery in Sonoma County, California, is over one hundred years old, while San Sebastian Winery in St. Augustine, Florida, began in 1996. There is also a Sebastiano Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills of California that Siduri Wines uses to make a Pinot Noir.
For a cold one, the Belgian brewery Sterkens currently makes a St. Sebastiaan Dark and a St. Sebastiaan Grand Cru.
ST. AGNES, VIRGIN AND MARTYR, JANUARY 21
Agnes (291–304) was only thirteen when she dedicated her maidenhood to Christ, much to the outrage of her many suitors. When she refused to change her mind, Agnes was handed over to the authorities. According to one story, they first tried to despoil her purity by putting her in a brothel, but any man who made advances on her was blinded and paralyzed. They then tried to burn her at the stake, but the wood would not ignite. Finally, she was decapitated on the Via Nomentana outside of Rome. Agnes went to her execution, St. Ambrose tells us, “more cheerfully than others go to their wedding.”
Agnes’s name is derived from agnus, the Latin word for lamb, and it also evokes the Greek word agnos, meaning “pure.” Her feast day is best known for the charming custom in which two lambs raised by the Trappist monastery of Tre Fontane outside of Rome are taken to the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth in Rome, where they are decorated with roses and a mantle. They then go to the basilica Sant’Agnese fuori le mura, where they are blessed on the altar by the abbot. From there, they are taken to the Vatican, where the pope himself receives and blesses them. The lambs are later shorn on Tuesday of Holy Week, and their wool used by the nuns of the Benedictine convent of St. Cecilia in Trastevere, Rome, to make palliums for newly installed metropolitan archbishops and patriarchs.
Given Agnes’s association with lambs, Lamb’s Wool (see p. 391) would work well for this feast, especially if you were too busy drinking rounds of Three Wise Men on the feast of the Epiphany to enjoy it then.
Wine and Beer
Seifried Estate in New Zealand has a Nelson “Sweet Agnes” Riesling that has been well received by critics. The California AVA region Santa Ynez Valley in Santa Barbara County is named after the Santa Inés, or St. Agnes, Mission, one of the twenty-one California missions founded by Bl. Junípero Serra (see p. 151–52). The spelling was later changed to “Ynez.” The valley has two AVA subregions, Sta. Rita Hills (see p. 116) and Happy Canyon of Santa Barbara (see p. 337), and over one hundred wineries. One of them is the Three Saints winery, which takes its name from the wine-growing regions where its grapes are cultivated: Santa Maria Valley, Santa Rita Hills, and Santa Ynez Valley.
Regarding beer, Carmody Irish Pub and Brewing in Duluth, Minnesota, has an Agnes Irish Red Ale, though its circulation is limited. Or try to find any of the products of Tre Fontane Abbey, which raises the lambs for today’s ceremonies (see p. 146): you can then raise a glass not only to St. Agnes but to the caretakers of her lambs. Failing that, any Trappist beer will do (see pp. 222–23). Likewise, you can honor the Benedictine nuns who make the palliums with any product associated with St. Benedict (see pp. 58–63) or St. Scholastica (see pp. 30–32).
LAST CALL
Suggested toasts include:
First round: “To St. Agnes, a pure bride of Christ and a true lamb of God.”
Second round: “To St. Agnes: May this little lamb lead us to the Lamb of God.”
Third round: “To St. Agnes: May her prayers keep the Devil from fleecing us.”
ST. VINCENT THE DEACON, JANUARY 22
(JANUARY 23 IN U.S.)
Also known as St. Vincent of Saragossa, Vincent of Huesca, and Vincent Martyr, this saint was born in Huesca, Spain, and martyred in Valencia around the year 304. He and his bishop, Valerius, were put on trial, and because his bishop had a speech impediment, Vincent spoke for both. His brash and outspoken manner angered the governor, and instead of being exiled (like the bishop), he was sentenced to torture and death. Vincent’s body was protected by ravens until it could be recovered by Christians, and the shrine for St. Vincent in which his remains were interred was likewise guarded by ravens. The ravens kept their watch through years of Moorish rule (when the place was called , the Church of the Raven), until St. Vincent’s relics were translated to Lisbon in the twelfth century, the ravens accompanying them on the ship.
Beer and Wine—and a Cocktail
Anything from the Black Raven Brewing Company in Redmond, Washington, or a Raven’s Eye Imperial Stout by the Eel River Brewing Company in Fortuna, California, would be appropriate—assuming you can find them in your area.
St. Vincent is a patron saint of winemakers and vintners, as well as the towns or cities of São Vicente and Lisbon in Portugal, Valencia in Spain, and Vicenza in Italy—all wine-producing areas. São Vicente is on the island of Madeira off the coast of Portugal, a perfect invitation to enjoy their fabled fortified wines (see pp. 289–90). And Vicenza is the DOC title (denominazione di origine controllata) of the Veneto wine region of northeast Italy. In the same region is the Anselmi winery (see p. 83), which has a San Vincenzo bottling consistently praised for its quality and value. In New Mexico, there is a winery owned by the Gruet family from the Champagne region of France called Domaine Saint-Vincent. (Looking to expand outside of France, they discovered that New Mexico has surprisingly good conditions for making sparkling wine.) The Bordeaux region of France has a Mission St. Vincent winery. In the Loire Valley, the Delhommeau winery has an affordable Cuvée St. Vincent Muscadet, and Les Vignerons des Coteaux Romanais have several bottlings called Le Grand St. Vincent Touraine. At the bottom of the globe, Douglas Green Wines, one of the oldest winemakers in South Africa, makes a dry white, aromatic St. Vincent wine.
Your easiest alternative in the United States, however, will no doubt be a bottle of wine from the Ravenswood Winery in Sonoma, California.
And if you are having difficulty locating a wine from an area under St. Vincent’s patronage, you can always have a cocktail. An obvious choice is the St. Vincent (see p. 174), but you could also try a mixed drink named after the martyr’s favorite bird.
The Raven by Colleen Graham
½ oz. vodka
½ oz. rum
½ oz. blue curaçao
¼ oz. Chambord
Pour the vodka, rum, and curaçao into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a highball glass with fresh ice and carefully pour the Chambord over the back of a spoon or on a Black and Tan spoon to create a luminous, layered effect.
LAST CALL
Whatever your choice, knock back a couple tonight and feel free to be brash and outspoken in imitation of St. Vincent—but don’t be surprised when you meet a similar fate.
CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL, JANUARY 25
St. Paul (ca. 5–67) shares his principal feast day on June 29–30 with the other Prince of the Apostles, St. Peter. Today’s feast focuses on Paul’s dramatic conversion around AD 35, when he went from being a persecutor of Christianity to one of its greatest promoters. Saul of Tarsus was a well-educated Pharisee on his way to Damascus to round up Christians and return them to Jerusalem as prisoners when a light from Heaven suddenly shone around him and a voice spoke to him saying, “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?” (Acts 9:4). Afterward, Saul discovered that he was blind and did not eat or drink for three days.
You can toast St. Paul’s turn to the Lord with any of the drinks mentioned on June 30 (see pp. 146–47), or you can zero in on the details of his conversion—except the part about not drinking for three days—with the following.
LAST CALL
As we will see in our next entry, Paul was obviously an inspired man, for he counseled St. Timothy to drink wine for his health. So tonight you have two choices: Savor a good glass of wine, possibly one with St. Paul’s name on it (see p. 147), perhaps while reading one of his epistles from the New Testament. Or have a couple of rounds with your friends and ask them to guess when Saul’s name was changed to Paul. We bet that most of them will answer at his conversion—and they’ll be wrong (see Acts 13:9).
The Knockdown
1 oz. gin
¾ oz. dry vermouth
½ oz. pastis (an anise-based liqueur like Absente, Herbsaint, Pernod, and Ricard)
¼ oz. white crème de menthe
1 cherry or mint sprig (for garnish)
Pour all ingredients except the cherry or mint into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with cherry or mint.
The Kicker
2 oz. Daiquiri rum
1 oz. Calvados brandy
2 dashes sweet vermouth
Pour all ingredients into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass.
We’re not sure why this tasty drink is called the Blinder, since it is more of a refreshing pick-me-up.
The Blinder
2 oz. scotch
5 oz. grapefruit juice
1 tsp. grenadine
Pour scotch and grapefruit juice into a highball glass filled with ice. Pour the grenadine into the center of the drink.
ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, JANUARY 27
(SEPTEMBER 13)
John (347–407), patriarch of Constantinople, was so powerful a preacher that he was given the posthumous epithet Chrysostom, meaning “golden mouthed,” and he was so unbending in the face of the Church’s enemies that he was once called “the man without knees.” In the Eastern churches, Chrysostom is considered one of the Three Holy Hierarchs, the other two being St. Basil the Great and St. Gregory of Nazianzus.
Apropos of this book, St. John was also a passionate defender of the consumption of wine. Commenting on 1 Timothy 5:23, the saint has this to say (suggestion: read this slowly and out loud for the full effect):
In writing to Timothy, [Paul] bid him take refuge in the healing virtue of wine-drinking. Not that to drink wine is shameful. God forbid! For such precepts belong to heretics. . . .
But since our discourse has now turned to the subject of blasphemy, I desire to ask one favor of you all, in return for this my address, and speaking with you; which is, that you will correct on my behalf the blasphemers of this city [i.e., those who are saying that wine is evil]. And should you hear anyone in the public thoroughfare, or in the midst of the forum, blaspheming God, go up to him and rebuke him; and should it be necessary to inflict blows, spare not to do so. Smite him on the face; strike his mouth; sanctify your hand with the blow, and if any should accuse you, and drag you to the place of justice, follow them thither; and when the judge on the bench calls you to account, say boldly that the man blasphemed the King of angels! For if it be necessary to punish those who blaspheme an earthly king, much more so those who insult God.*
You heard the man: sanctify your knuckles on anyone who tells you not to drink wine. But a safer alternative is to take refuge in the healing virtue of wine-drinking with a good bottle of vino and toast the saint who so eloquently affirmed the wholesomeness of the blood of the grape.
Or, to honor this golden-tongued Church Father, have the cinnamon schnapps made with gold flakes called Goldschläger (see p. 391).
This saint’s name has a fair number of variations, such as Maire, Maurus, May, Mere, and even Mary. Maurus of Bodon (d. 555) was the founder and first abbot of the monastery of Bodon in France. When he became ill, he made a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Denis near Paris to pray for a cure. Once there he had a dream in which St. Denis appeared to him and healed him; the next morning he awoke fully recovered from his malady. Later in his life he told a bishop of another dream he had in which he saw the Blessed Virgin Mary and the angels prostrate at the feet of God, pleading for Italy. The dream foretold the devastation of that country by barbarian invaders.
The dreams of the abbot St. Marius beckon us to a cocktail called the Abbot’s Dream.
Or, if you are already celebrating the feast of St. John Chrysostom (see above), you can kill two birds with one stone with a wine from the general vicinity of Saint-May, a village in Provence where his monastery once stood. Try to find the wines from the Drôme region under the vin de pays or IGP (indication géographique protégée) classification of Drôme. Should that prove infeasible, any wine from Provence (which has over six hundred winemakers) will do.
Abbot’s Dream
2 oz. Bailey’s Irish Cream
1 oz. Frangelico
½ oz. banana liqueur
½ oz. cream
In the original recipe, all ingredients are put into a blender with one cup of ice, blended until smooth, and poured into a highball. You can also, however, mix all ingredients in an old fashioned glass filled with ice.
ST. FRANCIS DE SALES, JANUARY 29
(JANUARY 24)
Francis (1567–1622) was born into the noble Savoyard or Sales family and received a top-notch education in theology and law. His family’s great plans for him were dashed when he broke off an arranged marriage to become a priest. He was appointed bishop of Geneva over an area that had become overwhelmingly Calvinist, but through his hard work and patience he won back seventy thousand souls to Catholicism. Together with St. Jane de Chantal, he founded the Order of the Visitation. Of his many great writings, his Introduction to the Devout Life stands out for inviting not only the clergy but the laity in all walks of life to the pursuit of holiness.
St. Francis is a doctor of the Church with the title of “Doctor of Charity,” and he has also been called “the Gentleman Saint” because of his gentle approach. But for showing the path of holiness to ordinary Christians, he could also be called the Doctor of Holy Living. To honor this great theologian and spiritual master, we recommend a bottle of St. Vivant Armagnac, a high-quality French brandy. (Armagnac, produced only in the French region of that name, is like cognac but with a drier taste.) Saint Vivant, which means “holy living,” derives its name from a now-defunct French abbey. The brandy is distinctive for the crooked neck of its bottles, a peculiarity chosen by the nobleman St. Vivant de la Salle, who began bottling it in 1559. It goes particularly well with a warm fire and a copy of the Introduction to the Devout Life.
St. Francis was also an expert on the human heart who not only understood humanity in all its spiritual and psychological complexity but who wrote in a way that touches the reader’s heart and gives it the courage to improve. The heart is an apt symbol for St. Francis in other ways as well: his work on the heart of Mary as the perfect model for loving God inspired St. John Eudes’s devotion to the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, and St. Francis’s own heart was kept as a relic in Lyon, France, after he passed away in that city.
There are two different cocktails answering to the name of Heart Warmer; the one we include here is ideal for a cold winter’s night (see p. 119 for the other).
Heart Warmer No. 1
½ oz. vanilla liqueur
½ oz. peppermint white liqueur
½ oz. amaretto
6 oz. hot black coffee
Pour all ingredients into an Irish coffee cup or coffee mug and stir.
Wine
St. Francis’s hometown of Thorens-Glières is in the French winegrowing region of Haute-Savoie, which has its own AOC appellation. Several Haute-Savoie wines are available in the United States, but should they prove elusive in your neck of the woods, you can broaden your search to any wine labeled Roussette de Savoie or Vin de Savoie. Failing that, go for any French or Swiss wine, knowing that St. Francis, like Our Lord, is concerned more about what comes out of the heart than what goes into the mouth.
Cordials
Lastly, St. Francis’s Introduction to the Devout Life compares a spiritual director to a “medicine that cures” and “a cordial that comforts our hearts.” What, pray tell, is a cordial? It is a liqueur, that is, a sweet distilled spirit that is at least 2.5 percent sugar. Cordials are often served neat after dinner in dainty glasses. Tonight, pick your favorite cordial (Chartreuse? Bénédictine? Limoncello? Sambuca? An absinthe liqueur?) and pray that St. Francis de Sales comforts your heart.
ST. MARTINA, JANUARY 30
St. Martina was a virgin and martyr from the early Church about whom little is known. The daughter of an ex-consul who was left orphaned at an early age, she openly testified to her Christian faith and, despite torture, refused to renounce her faith. She was beheaded around the year 228.
Martina’s name is obviously evocative of a martini, but since a virgin martini would be an empty glass with an olive in it, we suggest an extra-dry version instead. Because her symbols in Christian art include a two-pronged fork, a plastic cocktail fork could be used as a spear for the olives.
Martini, Extra Dry
2 oz. gin
1 splash vermouth
2 olives
Pour all ingredients except olives into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into a cocktail glass and garnish with olives.
ST. GEMINIANUS, JANUARY 31
St. Geminianus (d. 397) was the bishop of Modena, Italy. He is said to have offered hospitality on different occasions to Sts. Athanasius and John Chrysostom when they were in exile and to have been in touch with St. Ambrose. The citizens of Modena believe that St. Geminianus saved their city from invading Huns by conjuring up a dense fog to hide it. The people who lived near the castle of Silvia thought so too, which is why they changed the name of the castle to San Gimignano in AD 450. Eventually, the town that grew up around the castle also took on the saint’s name.
The area of Tuscany around San Gimignano produces two outstanding kinds of wines. Vernaccia di San Gimignano DOCG, made from a local grape of that name, is considered to be one of Italy’s finest white wines. Be careful, though—according to Dante, it was this wine that led Pope Martin IV to the sin of gluttony and a long stint in Purgatory (Purgatorio XXIV). Equally tempting is a Vin Santo named San Gimignano DOC, a sweet white or rosé dessert wine (for more on Vin Santo wines, see p. 364). Or enjoy a Foggy Day, a cocktail named after St. Geminianus’s favorite cloaking device.
A Foggy Day
1½ oz. gin
¼ oz. pastis
1 lemon twist
Pour all ingredients except lemon twist into a shaker filled with ice and shake forty times. Strain into an old fashioned glass filled with ice and garnish with lemon twist.
* Homilies on the Statues, 1.7.