Use Up Summer Fruits with This Israeli Drink

Fruit that's past its prime can be used to make a delightful fizzy drink. (Photo by Rachel Myerson)

For locals, one of the only things that makes Tel Aviv summers bearable is Cafe Levinsky 41. It’s a tiny store in the Levinsky Market that’s instantly recognizable by the pickup truck parked outside housing multiple planters full of edible herbs and plants. Inside, the store looks like a mad scientist’s lab, shelves crammed with glass jars filled with various concoctions: liquors, kombucha, macerating fruits and sweet syrups.

Levinsky 41 is known for its take on gazoz, a soda that was popular in Israel’s early years when it was sold from street kiosks. The original gazoz consisted of lurid-colored artificial syrups in fruity flavors like raspberry and lemon topped with soda water. The Levinsky version is a breathtaking upgrade.

The brains behind the biz is the lovable Benny Briga, who initially intended to serve coffee before he realized that his chef’s background, love of foraging and community gardens, and the market’s focus on pickles lent itself to preserving, fermenting and celebrating seasonal produce.

Benny’s gazoz is miles away from the chemical-laden offerings of yesteryear. But he follows the same process, topping a syrup made from fresh fruit with soda water. Along the way, he adds macerated and preserved fruits and garnishes with a riotous bundle of local herbs picked that morning.

At Levinsky 41, there is no set menu, and no two gazoz are the same. Reasoning that seasonal produce will always complement each other, Benny and the team add a little of this and a little of that at whim. The results are always fresh, floral and very Instagrammable.

By the end of August, I always have a surplus of summer fruit in my fridge that I couldn’t resist buying at the farmer’s market, despite the fact that I’ve had a constant bellyache since June due to an excess of fruity fiber. At this point, the summer straggler fruits are past their prime — overripe, mushy or wrinkled. So I use them to make my own three-step gazoz. It isn’t as complex as Benny’s, but it’s delicious all the same — particularly when you add a splash of gin.

This recipe originally appeared on The Nosher.

Home-made Gazoz

Course Drinks
Cuisine Israeli
Servings 8

Ingredients
  

For macerated fruit

  • 1 pound summer fruit (berries, stone fruit, melon, etc.)
  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 2-4 tablespoons liquid optional (lemon juice, balsamic vinegar, vanilla extract, brandy, or Grand Marnier

For simple syrup

  • 1 1/2 cups summer fruit
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • herbs and spices optional (e.g. 1 tablespoon black peppercorns, 2 bay leaves, 4 thyme sprigs, 1 jalapeno, lemon rind

For gazoz

  • soda water

Instructions
 

Macerate fruit

  • Wash and dry fruit. Slice larger fruits into bite-sized pieces.
  • Place fruit into large glass or plastic bowl. Sprinkle with sugar and liquid. Toss until fruit is evenly coated. Cover.
  • Let fruit sit at room temperature for 30 minutes, then refrigerate, stirring occasionally. It’s best to leave overnight, particularly if using harder-fleshed fruits. Note: This is a great way to use up fruits that aren’t very sweet.

Simple syrup

  • Wash and dry fruit. Slice larger fruits into bite-sized pieces.
  • Add fruit to saucepan along with sugar, water and herbs/spices. Let it simmer for 20-30 minutes, until the color and flavor of the fruit has leeched out into the water.
  • Strain the fruits from the liquid using a fine mesh strainer and cool liquid in the fridge. Note: This is the time to introduce Benny’s herbaceous flavors. Add black peppercorns to strawberry syrup, bay leaves to blackberry syrup, thyme to peach syrup or jalapeno to mixed berry syrup.

To serve

  • Add 2 tablespoons macerated fruit to a tall glass, followed by 2 tablespoons simple syrup. Top with soda water and garnish generously with herbs/cucumber/flowers.

Notes

Recipe by Rachel Myerson
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