Summer Watermelon Punch

By M. Carrie Allan
Washington Post
Summer Watermelon Punch. Picture / Supplied

A friend of mine recently told me about a time in university when she and her friends decided to throw an end-of-year party, and one of them suggested they make a drunken watermelon.

Ah, yes, I thought: the mythical drunken watermelon, unicorn of tippling youth. Oft hath its legend been whispered; it hath endured, I think, not because it's particularly effective, but because tippling youth love a DIY project that requires knives, sneakiness and wishful thinking. In fact, the latter is probably key for anyone pursuing an arts degree.

The outline of this project is thus: You get a watermelon and a bottle of vodka (it's always vodka, for some reason), cut a bottle-mouth-sized plug out of the watermelon's rind, then jam the open bottle into the fruit. Since watermelon has a spongelike texture - not unlike that firm green foam florists use to keep their arrangements in place - the bottle's contents will be soaked up by the fruit.

Once that's happened, you remove the bottle and replace the plug of rind, sealing the booze inside. Thus you've created a seemingly intact watermelon that's actually a portable Weapon of Mass Inebriation that can be toted to Phish concerts, church gatherings and the funerals of people you didn't really like, with no one ever realizing that the innocent, patriotic fruit you're slicing up and noshing on is juiced with Russian hooch.

Let me say here and now: It was clearly not a science major who came up with the drunken watermelon. The process just doesn't work very well, for obvious reasons. Namely, while the flesh of the watermelon, that receptive vessel into which this bottle of vodka is supposed to eagerly flow, is rather spongelike, it is a sponge that's already full - of watermelon. Unlike certain Metro riders, vodka won't rudely shoulder its way into space that's already occupied.

A good watermelon is already bursting - with water, to be specific, which makes up more than 90 per cent of the fruit. The idea that a full bottle of vodka will flow evenly throughout a large, juicy, densely fleshed melon? Nah. You'll get what my friend and her gang got: a small segment of watermelon that's intensely alcoholic, a lot of regular watermelon, and a bunch of annoyed, ant-covered partygoers jabbing at the melon with sporks, trying to find the boozy part.

Many have tried to refine the drunken watermelon process. Some instructions suggest drilling several bottle-holes in the melon, allowing you to spread the bottle's contents through more of the fruit. Others give in and go liquid: If you slice open a melon to make a punch bowl (simply removing the slim lid of rind), you can then hollow it out with a spoon a bit then stick a hand-mixer into the cavity, frappé the interior flesh into a smoothie, then add booze.

Some instructions imply that once you've done this, you can simply stick a tap into the base of the melon and get a free-flowing watermelon cocktail dispenser, but unless you blend the fruit thoroughly (more thoroughly than a hand mixer usually does), little remaining chunks of watermelon will probably clog the tap pretty quickly.

This technique also takes away part of the drunken watermelon's appeal. Watermelon juice and booze are delicious together, but they're not quite the thing sought by those questing to perfect the drunken watermelon. They are not watermelon itself: crisp, sweet and cold, its cells breaking under your teeth to release its juices, leaking its summery guts all over your clothes. Part of the joy of watermelon is that toothsome texture.

So I propose a new drunken watermelon, one that preserves that exquisite crispness and doesn't ignore the reality of fruit anatomy, one for people who aren't primarily using it to smuggle alcohol to underage drinkers.

The primary fix here is to open up the melon and use a melon-baller to scoop out a bunch of the fruit. You then infuse the melon balls in a boozy marinade for a few hours, where - their water-retaining cells now leaking - they will exchange some of their juice for the liquid they're sitting in. When it's ready to serve, you return the infused melon balls to the empty hull and pour the completed punch into it. If you have the fridge or freezer space, keep both the melon balls and the watermelon rind in the freezer for a few hours before you want to serve the punch; that way, when you move the whole thing outdoors for your picnic, the fruit and rind will keep the punch cold.

I've argued the merits of vodka in cocktails before, namely that it serves as a blank canvas for other flavours, so I understand the appeal of pairing it with watermelon, where it won't hide the fruit's flavour. But neither does it do much to enhance it.

If you want something summery and sophisticated, try the Summer Watermelon Punch. You'll get sweet, cold melon balls that have picked up the botanicals of gin and the complex, complementary herbal flavour of green Chartreuse, swimming in a drink that echoes those flavours but adds the contrasting tartness of fresh lime. It's bright, sweet and fresh, and a great centrepiece when served in the cold hull.

The guests (and ants) at your picnic will speak of it for years.

SUMMER WATERMELON PUNCH
Makes 20 small servings 

You'll need a melon baller, a blender, a fine-mesh strainer with cheesecloth, and a ladle.

Ideally, you should make Stage 1 of this punch at least 3 hours before serving it, to give the fruit time to get cold; this way, the chilled empty shell and fruit will provide the chilling mechanism for the punch.

If you don't have the time to freeze the melon balls, add large ice cubes or a block of ice at the end. If you're taking this punch to a picnic or cookout, the least-messy transport option is to carry the infused melon balls inside the melon and transport the rest of the punch in bottles. You can pour it into the empty watermelon shell once you have the hull set in its serving spot.

For a faster and streamlined option, see the Variation, below.

Ingredients
1 large ripe watermelon, plus extra watermelon for juicing (enough to make 7 cups of fresh watermelon juice and 40 to 60 melon balls)
3 cups dry gin
1 cup green Chartreuse
¼ cup sugar
1 cup fresh lime juice (from about 5 limes)
350ml tonic water
Lime wheels, for garnish
Ice cubes (optional)

Stage 1
1. Cut open the watermelon at the top, making it large enough so you'll be able to scoop out the melon inside and use the empty watermelon shell as a high-walled punch bowl. Scrape any red flesh left in the lid into a large bowl and reserve the "lid."

2. Use the small end of the melon baller to scoop out 40 to 60 watermelon balls; place these in a separate bowl. Scrape out the rest of the fruit and add it to the large bowl (with flesh from the lid). If you have space in your freezer, put the "lid" back on the watermelon hull and store the whole hull in the freezer, or at least refrigerate.

3. Working in batches, puree the watermelon flesh in a blender and blend to the consistency of a thick slush, then use a fine-mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth to strain out any solids, reserving the juice as you go. Continue until you have 7 cups of juice. Reserve any leftover fruit for another use (or use it to make more melon balls).

4. Combine 2 cups of the watermelon juice, 1 cup of the gin, ½ cup of the green Chartreuse and the ¼ cup of sugar in a deep bowl, stirring until the sugar dissolves, then pour the mixture over the melon balls. Freeze or refrigerate for 3 or 4 hours, until well chilled.

5. Remove the melon hull and the melon balls from the freezer. Ladle the melon balls back into the melon hull, reserving the leftover infusing liquid.

Stage 2
1. Position the chilled watermelon hull with melon balls where you intend to serve the punch.

2. Pour the remaining 5 cups of watermelon juice, 2 cups of gin, ½ cup of Chartreuse, 1 cup of lime juice and the reserved infusing liquid from the melon balls into the chilled melon hull, stirring to incorporate. Top with the tonic water and stir gently.

3. Drop the lime wheels inside, so they float on the surface. If the watermelon hull or melon balls don't seem cold enough, add some ice cubes, as needed.

4. Serve in punch cups. Store any extra punch in the refrigerator to top off the melon throughout the party.

Variation
Soaking the melon balls in the juice and spirits gives them a depth of flavour that contrasts with the final punch. But if you're in a hurry or want to streamline the recipe, skip the infusion stage. Simply carve out the melon balls, reserve them and make the punch as described in 2.

The Washington Post.

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