Crème de Noyaux


Crème de Noyaux is an almond-flavored crème liqueur, although it is actually made from apricot kernels or the kernels of peach or cherry pits, which provide an almond-like flavor. Both Bols and Hiram Walker produce artificially colored red versions of the liqueur while Noyau de Poissy from France is available in both clear and barrel-aged amber versions.
Historically, crème de noyaux would contain trace amounts of hydrogen cyanide, which is poisonous. Although the chemical was not normally present in a dangerous intensity, bottles of 19th-century Noyaux left for decades in the cellar would sometimes have all the cyanide float up to the top, with lethal results for the drinker of the first glass. Dorothy Sayers used this peculiarity of the old Crème de Noyaux in her short story "Bitter Almonds".
The name comes from the French noyau: "kernel, pit, or core". It is an ingredient in the Fairbank cocktail, the Pink Squirrel cocktail and in a cocktail called Old Etonian.
In 2013, Tempus Fugit Spirits recreated a 19th-century-style Crème de Noyaux – distilling both apricot and cherry pits, amongst other botanicals, and coloring the liqueur with red cochineal, as was done in the past. Care was taken to remove the trace elements of hydrogen cyanide produced in the process.

Noyau de Poissy

Noyau de Poissy is a liqueur made from apricot kernel almonds, macerated or distilled in a superfine alcohol, in the presence, according to the recipes, of fine wine brandy, enriched with plants and subtly flavored.
There are therefore 2 Noyau de Poissy liqueurs:
It should be added:
  • Le Noyau de Vernon, infusion of cherry pits and almonds mixed with kirsch brandy. A distillery, bearing the name of this spirit, was created in the nineteenth century in the city of Vernon before disappearing in the 1980s and seeing its production continue by the company Vedrenne.