Showing posts with label citrus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label citrus. Show all posts

Friday, 2 March 2018

Dandelion Wine

I swear that I'm going to try it this year. I like this method as it looks plausibly medieval.


Ingredients
  • 10 cups dandelion blossoms (leaves only, no green part or it will be too bitter)
  • 3.7 litres (or 1 gallon, or 16 cups) water
  • 2 oranges with peel (if I'm eating the peel I really prefer organic)
  • 1 lemon with peel
  • 6 cups sugar
  • 1 pkg wine yeast
  • 0.45 kg (or 1 lb) raisins

Friday, 13 January 2017

Herbal hot chocolate

Herbal Hot Chocolate 
  • 3 oz really good chocolate (the best you can afford)
  • 2c milk of your choice (cow, almond, rice, coconut, etc)
  • 1/4c cream (optional- cow or coconut)
  • 2tsp dried herbs (combinations suggested below, or experiment)

Method


  • Put your milk and herbs in a small sauce pan and heat gently and slowly (you don't want to scorch the milk and have it stick to the bottom of the pan
  • Take it off the heat and let it cool while you chop the chocolate
  • Strain the herbs out of the milk and back into the sauce pan. Add the chocolate.
  • Heat again very slowly and over a low heat. The chocolate will melt. Whisk very frequently.
  • Pour into a mug when it is quite warm to the touch, but not boiling.

List of good herbs and other ingredients- mint, bee balm, lemon balm, lemon verbena, sweet violet, rose, citrus (from organic peels), ginger, lavender, raspberry leaves

Herb combination suggestions- White chocolate and lavender, milk chocolate with citrus and ginger, white chocolate with sweet violet and rose, dark chocolate with raspberry leaves and mint, dark chocolate with lemon balm and ginger.


Hopefully this will help you get through the long, dark teatime of the soul in January and February... Along with garden catalogues.

Saturday, 2 April 2016

How to grow and store your own herbal tea


Some herbs to try-
Mint, Lavender, Lemon verbena, Lemon balm, Thyme, Chamomile, Rosemary, Fennel, Sage, Lemon grass (will grow in a pot and can be over-wintered that way), Rose hips (I've mentioned this before, but they have an amazing amount of vitamin C), Linden tree flowers (harvest before the flower bud opens, and they taste like honey), Hyssop (lovely, fragrant leaves and the bees love the flowers), Clover blossoms,Organic citrus peels (eat the fruit and save the peels from the outside. Trim off the sour, white rind to improve the flavour), Blackberry and raspberry leaves, and Borage (the flowers are sweet and the leaves a bit cucumber-y). If you want to get some nutrition into yourself in early spring try gathering some nettles. They are surprisingly healthy, with vitamin C, B1, K, carotenoids, and a lot of calcium and magnesium and a few other minerals. Use gloves to gather them because of the stinging, but after being immersed in hot water they are safe to handle. Young nettles were commonly chopped up and added to pottages in the spring to help people recover after a winter of less food (and vitamins and minerals). Later in the summer they get too woody and fibrous. In fact, nettles are another source of spinnable fibres and are processed like flax.

How to dry and store herbs and plant material-