Chives and parsley. They're hard to air dry so I'm going to put them into the freezer. I have a dehydrator somewhere... I suspect it got put in the crawl space when we moved in, and I hate going in there. Freezer it is!
In Anglo-Saxon- the place where the people grow plants
This is my blog where I'll post gardening ideas, recipes for things you can (mostly) grow in your own garden, and the results of my experiments. There will probably be a few posts on medieval herbalism as well.
Showing posts with label drink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drink. Show all posts
Friday, 12 October 2018
Fall herb harvest
Labels:
bees,
chives,
culinary herbs,
dehydrator,
diy,
drink,
ecology,
fall,
gardening,
herbs,
horehound,
lavender,
local,
local food,
parsley,
peppermint,
pollinator,
tea
Monday, 27 August 2018
More mead thoughts
As is usually the case I'm not the first person to have thought about the medieval way of making mead. I came across a great post in a forum recently that really clears up all my questions. This is the kind of mead that I'm going to be making at the end of the week-
Labels:
Anglo Saxon,
beehive,
bees,
diy,
drink,
experiment,
fall,
gluten free,
grain free,
history,
honey,
mead,
medieval,
Norse,
recipe
Sunday, 15 July 2018
Some thoughts on mead and pre-industrial bee keeping
So, in a lot of mead recipes there's the direction to boil the honey with water and skim off the scum, which sterilizes it a bit and removes impurities. With modern beekeeping methods there's very little in the way of impurities, so this always seemed like a slightly redundant step to me. Until two days ago when I had to clean up a mess I let build up in a hive, and I ended up with almost 2kg of honey, and the associated wax... and a bunch of dead bees in it. Pro tip- bees are busy little creatures, and if you leave a bit of extra space on top for any reason they will build right up into it lickety-split.
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, 7 July 2017
Alcohol isn't usually my thing, but...
This really appealed to me somehow. This recipe makes one glass. Expand if you want to make more.
Earl Grey Tea and Lavender Cocktail
- 3/4 cup earl grey tea (cold)
- 2Tbsp gin
- 2Tbsp honey simple syrup
- 1Tbsp fresh lemon juice
- 2 sprigs of lavender ( +1 to garnish)
Labels:
bergamot,
culinary herbs,
drink,
honey,
lavender,
lemon balm,
lemon juice,
recipe,
tea
Friday, 3 February 2017
Hot spiced cider
Hot Spiced Cider
- One small apple (optional)
- 1/2c brown sugar or dark honey
- 8c apple juice or local cider
- 1tsp whole allspice (I never have it around, but it's yummy if you do)
- 1tsp whole cloves
- 4-6 whole cinnamon sticks
Labels:
allspice,
apple,
brown sugar,
cider,
cinnamon,
cloves,
compost,
drink,
honey,
local,
local food,
recipe,
reuse,
vegan,
vegetarian
Friday, 13 January 2017
Herbal hot chocolate
Herbal Hot Chocolate
Method
- 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.
Labels:
bee balm,
citrus,
cream,
culinary herbs,
diy,
drink,
ginger,
lavender,
lemon balm,
lemon verbena,
milk,
mint,
raspberry,
recipe,
rose,
sweet violet,
vegan,
vegetarian
Friday, 24 June 2016
Wildflower mead
This is a good time of year to make mead, and I'm going to try. Again. Last time didn't work out so well because I forgot about it in the closet and it went... stinky. I was a bit disappointed. Plus, it was such a large carboy that it was unmanageable.
However, this recipe seems like a good way to start- one gallon jar, local honey, and flowers from my own garden (and hopefully some of the ones which I've planted out there in the wild this past spring).
Wish me luck.
And this time I'm using a calendar.
However, this recipe seems like a good way to start- one gallon jar, local honey, and flowers from my own garden (and hopefully some of the ones which I've planted out there in the wild this past spring).
Wish me luck.
And this time I'm using a calendar.
Labels:
diy,
drink,
experiment,
gleaning,
honey,
local food,
mead,
wildcrafting,
wildflowers
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