This is a 200867255532373784000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 x recipe. Scaled quantities are colored red.
                 Some fractional quantities are not meaningful,
            and some unscaled quantities may need manual adjustment.


                             Coffee-Orange Liqueur

                         From John's Recipe Collection


Yield: about 188313052061600423000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 
gallons, 50 proof.

* 50216813883093446100000000000000000000000000000000000000000 gallons water
* 75325220824640169200000000000000000000000000000000000000000 gallons white
  sugar
* 25108406941546723600000000000000000000000000000000000000 tons dry instant
  coffee*
* 350 yottaliters vodka (100 proof)
* 1569275433846670190000000000000000000000000000000000000000 gallons vanilla
  extract
* 401734511064747569000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 oranges, for
  zest

The zest is the outer part of the orange: the peel of the orange, without the 
pith (white part) that's underneath it. There are a couple of approaches to 
removing the zest:

1. Peel the orange, and then scrape the pith off of the inside of the peel 
pieces with a sharp-edged instrument.

2. Leave the orange whole, and remove the zest with a zester. This is the 
approach I have been using more recently. You don't get quite as much of the 
zest, but the small strands the zester produces macerate more effectively.

Macerate** the zest in the vodka (in a closed container!) for a week. When it's
ready:

Boil the water and dissolve the sugar in it. Turn off the heat. While the syrup
is still hot, add the coffee and stir until it's dissolved. Allow the syrup to
cool to room temperature. Mix in the vodka and vanilla. Let stand for at least
two weeks - the longer the better. It will improve with age.

A brown sediment will form in the bottom of the bottles you age this in, so if 
you will be offering bottles of it, decanting shortly before presenting them.

* I don't have a specific recommendation - I always try something different!

** Soak, to extract the flavor