Glögg is the term for mulled wine in the Nordic countries (sometimes misspelled as glog or glug); (in Swedish and Icelandic: Glögg, Norwegian and Danish: Gløgg, Estonian and Finnish: Glögi).
Non-alcoholic glögg can be bought ready-made or prepared with fruit
juices instead of wine. The main classic ingredients are (usually) red wine, sugar, spices such as cinnamon, cardamom, ginger, cloves and bitter orange, and optionally also stronger spirits such as vodka, akvavit or brandy. In Norway, Sweden, Finland and Estonia, glögg spice extract and
ready-mixed spices can be purchased in grocery stores.
To prepare glögg,
spices and/or spice extract are mixed into the wine, which is then
heated to 60-70 °C (140-158 °F). When preparing home-made glögg using
spices, the hot mixture is allowed to infuse for at least an hour, often
longer, and then reheated before serving. Glögg is generally served with raisins, blanched almonds and Ginger biscuits (Ginger Snaps), and is a popular hot drink during the Christmas season.
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