When I was a kid, my step-grandma bought me a set of books by Lucy Maud Montgomery. Toots (that’s her nickname) was born in Canada, and these books had been her favorite as a child—the “Anne of Green Gables” series. I was around 9 or 10 years old, and they looked incredibly boring to me. I loved books, but at that time I was into “Encyclopedia Brown” and “Nancy Drew” and “The Babysitter’s Club.” These “Anne” books sounded dated and old fashioned and slow. I thanked her politely and put the paperbacks on my bookshelf, where they gathered dust for a couple of years.
One summer afternoon when I was 12, I found myself with nothing to do. I’d already read all of the books on my shelf (many of them twice), and nobody was around to give me a ride to the library. The only thing I hadn’t tackled yet was “Anne of Green Gables.” With a reluctant sigh, I picked up the first book and started reading.
That summer day, my whole world changed. I don’t think it’s overstating things to say that “Anne of Green Gables” helped to shape the person I am today. As a young child, my grandparents had exposed me to historical films and classical music. I had an appreciation for history, but I had never read a classic novel outside of school. Through this book, I found myself transported to Edwardian era Canada, following the life of a little orphan girl—Anne Shirley, Anne “spelled with an e.” Though her character was created over 70 years before I was born, this little girl living on Prince Edward Island had so much in common with me. She was creative with a wild imagination. She was misunderstood by her peers, and even by most adults. She loved to speak in flowery prose. She enjoyed reading poetry and had a flair for the dramatic. But for all of her outward confidence and fiery spirit, inside she was a sensitive creature… a fragile soul, who felt every happiness and disappointment deep within in her core.
I identified with Anne on many levels… in fact, I still do. I always dream big, and I remain optimistic to the very end, even when the odds are not in my favor. In this passage from “Anne of Avonlea,” the sequel to “Anne of Green Gables,” Marilla tries to comfort Anne through a difficult time. Anne’s response is pretty much the way I live my life, for better or worse.
“You’ll probably have a good many more and worse disappointments than that before you get through life,” said Marilla, who honestly thought she was making a comforting speech. “It seems to me, Anne, that you are never going to outgrow your fashion of setting your heart so on things and then crashing down into despair because you don’t get them.”
“I know I’m too much inclined that way,” agreed Anne ruefully. “When I think something nice is going to happen I seem to fly right up on the wings of anticipation; and then the first thing I realize I drop down to earth with a thud. But really, Marilla, the flying part IS glorious as long as it lasts. . .it’s like soaring through a sunset. I think it almost pays for the thud.” –Anne of Avonlea, Chapter XVII
Like many young girls who have discovered Anne over the years, I devoured the entire book series with unbridled enthusiasm. There are 8 books in all, following Anne’s life from a wiry 11 year-old misfit to a happily married mother of six. The last two books focus on Anne’s children, with Anne in a supporting role. After reading the books, I was delighted to discover a beautifully produced miniseries by Sullivan Films– you can buy the Anne of Green Gables DVD’s here and the sequel, Anne of Avonlea, here. This miniseries comes remarkably close to capturing the magic of the original books. Sometimes, when I’m in bed with a cold or feeling blue, I’ll turn on the “Anne of Green Gables” DVD. It always brings a smile to my face.
Of all the food scenes in the Anne series (and there are many), the raspberry cordial scene is probably the most memorable… tied, perhaps, with the mouse pudding scene. When I considered doing an Anne of Green Gables post, raspberry cordial was the first recipe that came to mind. The scene appears in a chapter titled, “Diana is Invited to Tea with Tragic Results.”
One autumn afternoon, Anne’s adoptive mother Marilla leaves town for a meeting of the Aid Society at Carmody. She allows Anne to invite her “bosom friend,” Diana, over to Green Gables for tea while she is gone. Anne is thrilled at the prospect of preparing afternoon tea for her friend, and Diana is equally excited—they both feel like very mature young ladies.
When Diana arrives for tea, Anne gushes about the spread she’s prepared, hinting at a very special drink in the pantry…
“Marilla is a very generous woman. She said we could have fruit cake and cherry preserves for tea. But it isn’t good manners to tell your company what you are going to give them to eat, so I won’t tell you what she said we could have to drink. Only it begins with an R and a C and it’s bright red color. I love bright red drinks, don’t you? They taste twice as good as any other color.” Anne of Green Gables, Chapter XVI
The drink is raspberry cordial, a sweet concoction made from fresh raspberries, sugar, and lemon juice. Marilla has allowed Anne to use a half bottle left over from a church social, a very special treat.
When it comes time to serve the drink, Anne presents the bottle to Diana with a tumbler, but doesn’t take a drink herself…
“Now, please help yourself, Diana,” she said politely. “I don’t believe I’ll have any just now. I don’t feel as if I wanted any after all those apples.”
Diana poured herself out a tumblerful, looked at its bright-red hue admiringly, and then sipped it daintily.
“That’s awfully nice raspberry cordial, Anne,” she said. “I didn’t know raspberry cordial was so nice.”
“I’m real glad you like it. Take as much as you want. I’m going to run out and stir the fire up. There are so many responsibilities on a person’s mind when they’re keeping house, isn’t there?”
When Anne came back from the kitchen Diana was drinking her second glassful of cordial; and, being entreated thereto by Anne, she offered no particular objection to the drinking of a third. The tumblerfuls were generous ones and the raspberry cordial was certainly very nice.
“The nicest I ever drank,” said Diana. “It’s ever so much nicer than Mrs. Lynde’s, although she brags of hers so much. It doesn’t taste a bit like hers.” – Anne of Green Gables, Chapter XVI
Of course, there was a reason the cordial didn’t taste a bit like Mrs. Lynde’s… it wasn’t raspberry cordial. Anne mistook a bottle of currant wine for cordial, which led to Diana becoming hopelessly drunk. Months of drama ensued, with Anne being labeled a troublemaker and a misfit by Diana’s family. Poor Anne… always so misunderstood.
I began to research the history of cordial—or “squash,” as it’s called in some parts of the world. The word cordial can refer to a variety of drinks, including alcoholic liqueurs made with fruit and other sweet ingredients. In Anne’s case, the Raspberry Cordial that she meant to serve to Diana was non-alcoholic, meaning it was a “squash”-style beverage. Squash cordials are concentrated syrups made from sugar, fruit, and water. The syrup is diluted with water or seltzer before serving. In Anne’s case, the Raspberry Cordial she meant to serve was likely a sugary homemade raspberry concentrate thinned with water. Lemon juice was often added as a preservative. In the Edwardian era, this drink would have been made with fresh raspberries. Frozen berries can be used just as easily. I used fresh, because our local farmer’s market is teeming with beautiful berries this time of year.
If you’d like to make your own batch of raspberry cordial, my recipe appears below. Keep in mind that this is a traditional cordial, which means it is very sugary and should be thinned with water or seltzer before serving.
In a future blog, perhaps I will tackle the currant wine recipe that made Diana so drunk… or maybe the pudding with the infamous “mouse sauce.” Till then, I’ll leave you with a few words of wisdom from Anne:
“Isn’t it splendid to think of all the things there are to find out about? It just makes me feel glad to be alive–it’s such an interesting world. It wouldn’t be half so interesting if we know all about everything, would it? There’d be no scope for imagination then, would there?”
Recommended Products:
Anne of Green Gables DVD Series
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Anne of Green Gables Raspberry Cordial
Ingredients
- 48 ounces raspberries, fresh or frozen (4 pints)
- 1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
- 3 cups sugar
- 12 cups water
NOTES
Instructions
- Clean and rinse the raspberries, then place them in a very large bowl.
- Pour the lemon juice over the berries. Use a large spoon to stir the juice into the berries.
- On the stovetop, heat 12 cups of water and 3 cups of sugar to a boil. Stir till the sugar dissolves. Remove from heat.
- Pour the boiling water over the raspberries. Allow the water to cool for 1-2 hours to room temperature.Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a towel that you don't mind staining. Place in the refrigerator to steep for 24 hours.
- Pour the cordial through a fine mesh sieve to strain.
- Push gently on the solids with the back of a spoon, if you wish, to extract more juice. This will produce a slightly cloudy effect in the cordial, which will settle at the bottom of the storage bottle, but it won't change the flavor. If you'd prefer a clearer cordial, do not press down on the solids-- just strain them.
- Once you've strained the juice from the berries, you will find that the leftover berries are mushy and quite sweet. Save them in the fridge, they are terrific served as a topping for ice cream.
- This recipe makes a large batch of cordial, which will store very well in the refrigerator if you use a clean gallon jug. You can easily halve the recipe if you don't need quite so much cordial.
- To serve, mix 1 part cordial with 1 part water or seltzer water. If you prefer a less sweet drink, dilute the cordial to taste. Serve cold.
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
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Carol Esther says
I SOOOOO LOVE Anne of Green Gables!!! Thank you so so much for this. I have relatives who live on Prince Edward Island and they keep asking when I am coming to visit. I sure wish I had the money to go there. One of these days!
Hugs,
Carol
Daniela says
hi! nice recipe! if i don’t have rasberries can i use other berries? do you think other fruit could work? or maybe herbs or flowers…? i’m also trying you Janucá’s recipes! my husband love latkes!!! 😉
Tori Avey says
Hi Daniela, I don’t know about herbs or flowers, but other berries might work. You could try it with blackberries, boysenberries, loganberries, or sliced strawberries… all of those would likely work great. Enjoy!
Alexis says
In answer to your question, I have made this with several kinds of berries so far, the usual raspberries was delightful. I then tried strawberries & sliced cherries again pretty good. Last weekend I made a mixed berries cordial. Next month I plan to use frozen blueberries.
I am sure you can use any fruit but Im going to go ahead and experiement to find out. Trial & Error. 🙂
Patricia Campbell says
Can you substitute a liqueur for the water, If so any suggestions?
Tori Avey says
I’m not sure about that Patricia, I’ve only made a non-alcoholic version.
Gwen Stevenson says
My daughter and I love Anne! I will make some of this for Christmas Presents this year. I won’t tell her where the recipe came from. Just one question – does it have to be stored in the fridge. I wanted to make quite a bit and put them in bottles but won’t have that much room in the fridge.
Thanks
Tori Avey says
Hi Gwen– please do tell her where the recipe came from! Part of the reason I work so hard on this site is to bring people back here again and again to experience more food history and fun. As for your refrigerator question, yes, it does need to be refrigerated unless you are planning on using a sterile bottling process.
Maleka says
We’re are going to give it for gifts to.
Nic says
I love discovering new and exciting blogs! I thought I was the only lover of the Anne series…..and History, at that. I seriously just watched it two days ago! I love that you have found a way to incorporate one’s love of history and cooking together. Great way to learn and appreicate our world today and of yester-year. I’ve always loved Turkish Delights. There is a great scene from the Cronicals of Narnia where they partake in the sweet treat. Can you add these to your blog?
Tori Avey says
I always wanted to try Turkish Delights, for the very same reason– the Chronicles of Narnia make them sound so delicious! I will definitely keep it in mind for a future post. 🙂
Regina says
I am dumb founded over how much your story mirror’s mine! The only difference is, I was every bit of an adult of about 19 or even 20 when given this 8 set series by a friend who was getting rid of “junk” to move. I too took it to be nice, but remember thinking ‘how juvenile!’. On a lonely bored out of my mind day, I picked up the first book, needless to say 3 weeks later I was done with book 8, and couldn’t wait to start over again! I tell you ,your words wring true when you say they changed my whole life! I didn’t come to appreciate history until reading these books. And found myself being jealous that I was not born during this time. Inside joke between my husband and myself when watching something really old, I always say I should have been born during this time. My husband says, ” No you don’t, you would have been a slave during that time. This is true since I am African American. But I can’t help feeling that way. Lucy Maude Montgomery was just genius! So much so that I almost refuse to believe that Anne was not real. There is only one other person that could make me believe in characters that way, that you know to be fictional, and that was Agatha Christie. Any how, after Anne spelled with an “e” I looked for anything by Lucy Maude Montgomery, and came across a lovely short story Kilmeny of the Orchard I fell in love with that book so much, I vowed to name someone that one day if ever given the chance. Little did I know at 28 I would have the chance to name my very own daughter Kilmeny. She is now 14 and equally enjoying Anne of Green Gables as well as her name sake book. And I tell you she is herself very much like Anne, a girl who is a true ‘kindred spirit’ with ‘lot’s of scope for imagination’. But there is one thing we differ on, you and I. I loved the books Lucy wrote soooo much that it has taken me quite some time to adjust to the Walt Disney series. I still can’t watch and love them as comfortably as the books. I should have seen them first maybe I wouldn’t feel that way,but as the saying goes, no matter how good the movie, the book is always better. After falling so in love with those characters, coming to love each and every one of them,(even Ruby Gillis!) not even Walt Disney could do true justice enough for me. As another commenter said I am truly jealous you have been to PEI and I never have. A few years ago I did email the museum their in honor or Lucy, and they sent me some wonderful literature and keepsakes things. It is one of my dream vacations, just can’t get the hubby to agree. I want to thank you for this wonderful recipe, keeping the memory of these wonderful characters, of Anne and her creator Lucy Maude Montgomery alive. In this time of face book and playstation, and cell phones and such, it’s so nice to share with my daughter a simpler time when life was just sweet.
Tori Avey says
Regina, thank you for sharing your story! I’ve actually never been to PEI, but it is definitely on my bucket list. 🙂
Ceri says
Hi,
How long is this cordial likely to last? I’d like to make it for a present and would ideally love to make it in advance! Also, should it be kept in the fridge? Thanks!
Tori Avey says
Hi Cerl, I recommend refrigeration unless you are using a sterile canning process. If kept in the refrigerator, the cordial will last for many weeks. Sugar and lemon are both natural preservatives. Enjoy!
Lu H. says
Thank you so much for starting this series! I have always been interested in the history of foods and cultures and am always surprised at the complexity and sophistication of recipes from hundreds of years ago.
Kim @ mommyknows says
I love Anne as well.
I always refer to my husband as ‘my very own Gilbert Blythe’.
The raspberry cordial looks fabulous 🙂
Erika B. says
I would not trade my memories for the world of the times my family and I have spent vacationing in PEI. Started back in “1992”, was my first trip and we continued going when we could BUT sadly we have not been back to the Island since “2007”. Those that have not made this trip to the great Island MUST add it to their list of places to go for I know many of us have a list like that saved. Great pictures for this Raspberry Cordial!!! Looks so tastey and I will have to try making it.
Margaret Dilloway says
Visiting PEI is also on my list! Love your photos– I’ve always wanted to try raspberry cordial. But goodness- raspberries cost a pretty penny in these parts(I sound like Marilla); I’ll have to check out the price of frozen. I’m thinking it’ll be at least $20 to make this in southern CA.
Tori Avey says
Frozen are much more affordable, and should work just as well.
Freja999 says
Gorgeous presentation! Where did you find the bottle?
Tori Avey says
Hi Freja, I got the bottle at Cost Plus World Market. 🙂
Linda Preston says
We must be kindred spirits! I too make raspberry cordial but I follow the recipe from the Anne of Green Gables Cookbook. I mash the raspberries with a potato masher while they are cooking on the stovetop. I use cheesecloth to strain it. I buy special wine bottles to pour it in with a funnel. I have four daughters and for the one who are over 21…I let them add a little vodka to theirs! The movies are a favorite of all the sisters including me. My daughter,Francesca, dressed up like Anne and made an entire dinner from the cookbook when she was in middle school. The creamy vegetable soup is amazing. I also make Marilla’s plum pudding in my crock pot! I devised a way to cook it inside another container kind of floating in the crock pot tightly covered. I definitely want to visit PEI too in this lifetime. My oldest daughter, Lucia, has a blog called Raspberry Cordial for people who love to read and she has one called “Heroine TV” that is incredible with tons of recounts on TV shows. She read all the books first in the family and inspired her sisters to read them.
Olga says
Anne of Green Gables! Thanks for reminding me of one of my favorites, both books and movie.
I just love the way you write and the recipes. History has always fascinated me, especially the history of food. I’ll definitely have to try this recipe. It kind of reminds me of something that Russians make all the time called kompot, made by cooking fruit or berries with sugar to make a very concentrated liquid and then diluting it with water. Yum!
Kristen says
So excited to try this! my whole family (including dad) are huge fans of “Anne with an e” and my sister and I still use the term “in the depths of despair” when we are feeling such. We visited Green Gables in P.E.I. as a family vacation 20 years ago now, but I’ll never forget it. The books still touch my heart- the quote from Anne about “flying right up on the wings of anticipation” totally hits home for me at this time in my life and brought tears to my eyes! I’m looking forward to future Anne of Green Gables recipes 🙂
Judi Whalen says
The raspberry cordial sounds wonderful. Do you know how long it will last in the fridge. It would be a wonderful drink to serve on a Summer afternoon.
Tori Avey says
Hi Judi, it will last quite a long time in the refrigerator– at least a month, if not longer. Sugar and lemon juice are natural preservatives. Enjoy!
Scotty'sMomNB says
I also love the “Anne” books and re-read them regularly, even now. The passages you quoted above are some of my favorite, as well as the green hair episode in the first book. I can’t wait to try this recipe since raspberries are wonderful right now. Thank you so much!
Tori Avey says
Gotta love the green hair scene… classic!
Susan says
PEI is the most beautiful province in Canada…since this is where my parents live we get to travel there every summer…if you haven’t been, you must put it on your bucket list…friendliest people in the Maritimes
Tori Avey says
Susan, it is most definitely on my bucket list… I want to visit so much!
Bella Breault says
Hello Susan,
My family and I just returned from PEI (3rd trip there) and my daughter got hooked on raspberry cordial…so I thought I’d look for a recipe and found this one. YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY CORRECT in your post about PEI and the friendly people…we love it and have even discussed retiring there…Our last trip was 35 years ago and this trip we were able to make it with our sons and daughter together with wives and grandchildren…it was fabulous…a trip of a lifetime! You are so lucky to have roots there. I too am a huge Anne of Green Gables fan and have always wanted to go thru the Anne of Gables Home on PEI. I was so disappointed this trip because I told my family I had decided I was definitely going thu on this trip…so we saw an ad which stated it was the “Anne of Green Gables Museum”….but when we got there, it was the homestead of Lucy Maude Montgomery…interesting but disappointing. We did, however get to see the musical “Anne of Green Gables” at The Guild and really enjoyed it….but still got the Anne of Green Gables home on my bucket list.
Stella says
Yay!
This is so wonderful. Can’t wait to make it this weekend!
Now I kind of want to re-read the entire series, too. I haven’t read it since I was in high school. I bet it holds up.
Tori Avey says
It totally holds up Stella! I’ve become so nostalgic working on this post that I might have to pick it up again too. I’ve lost count how many times I’ve read the first book!
Nina says
I also loved Anne of Green Gables and enjoyed re-reading the books as an adult! The food that most caught my fancy was “plum puffs.” A book called The Anne of Green Gables Treasury has a recipe, but they don’t seem as magical as the idea I have in my mind from the Anne books. I think LM Montgomery was a fantastic nature writer, too. Her descriptions of the PEI landscape are so evocative! Your picture of Green Gables above brought a smile — I have a similar one, except my daughter is sitting in the wagon! We visited in 2010.
As for a “cool, dark area of the kitchen” — we don’t have such a thing, especially during berry season. Is it okay to let the berries steep in the fridge?
Tori Avey says
Hi Nina! I’m so jealous that you’ve been to PEI, I’ve always wanted to visit– it’s a dream of mine. Yes, if you have room in the fridge for a big bowl, you can put it there. Just make sure you leave the mixture out for 1-2 hours till fully cooled before transferring to the fridge.