Showing posts with label beverages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beverages. Show all posts

Best Fresh Lemonade

This recipe come from the April 2013 issue of Relish, a newspaper insert. I saved it for just such a time as this -- summer in the Deep South.
The recipe suggested coating glass rims with Lemon Sugar and I’ve included that recipe. I’ll probably skip that step. I won’t be skipping the step to completely dissolve the sugar with boiling water. It really does make a difference in the final product. It's a secret I learned years ago when making Sweet Tea.
Best Fresh Lemonade

4 cups water
2 cups sugar
2 cups fresh lemon juice (about 10 lemons)
Lemon Sugar for glass rims

Boil or microwave 2 cups water with sugar until sugar is dissolved. Let cool. Squeeze lemons to make about 2 cups juice. Combine juice, sugar water and remaining 2 cups water. Stir well and chill.

Drip the rim of each glass in a shallow bowl of water. Coat the rims with Lemon Sugar. Serve over ice and additional lemon slices.

Makes 8 servings.

Lemon Sugar

4 lemons
1 cup sugar

Preheat oven to 225 degrees.

Peel lemons with a vegetable peeler or paring knife. Place peels on a baking sheet. Place in oven and let dry about 2 hours, until light tan in color. When thoroughly dry, grind peels in a coffee mill or in a food processor. Mix ground peel with sugar.

Makes about 1 1/3 cups.

Pom-Berry Shake

A few years ago my Dad decided he wanted a few strawberry plants. We love strawberries and they’re fairly easy to grow. You just have to take care of them and keep the weeds at bay.

He soon lost interest and the weeds and grass covered the strawberries. They appeared to be lost. A couple of years passed and he wanted to purchase more strawberry plants. He did and cleared and space in the garden and planted them there.

I wasn’t quite ready to give up on the older plants. I began pulling grass and weeds and, sure enough, the plants had survived. They produce large, juicy strawberries. I’m so glad I took the time to uncover them.

This recipe is from the May 2013 issue of Coastal Living. They’ve got some fabulous milkshake recipes, along with some tips on making awesome shakes. Be sure to check it out.
Pom-Berry Shake

½ cup pomegranate-blueberry juice
12 oz. frozen mixed berries such as strawberries, raspberries and blueberries
1 quart vanilla ice cream
1 cup milk
Garnishes: whipped cream, fresh berries

Combine juice, berries, ice cream and milk in a blender. Process until smooth. Garnish, if desired.

Makes 4 servings.

Sweet Tea

It has come to my attention that not everyone knows how to make Sweet Tea. This is a staple in any authentic Southern household. Understand that knowing how to make Sweet Tea does not mean you have to drink it. You just need to know how to make it so you can be a proper Southern hostess and serve it to your guests.

I grew up drinking Sweet Tea. It was served at dinner and supper, ever day of the year. Sometimes other beverages were served with it. Maybe lemonade during the summer. When I left home, I left the Sweet Tea behind. I'd much rather drink Crystal Light or water. After I returned to the South, I dutifully picked up Sweet Tea drinking again. Then I read somewhere that each glass has like a gazillion calories. That ended that. There I was drinking something I didn't really like and consuming more calories in one meal than a person should consume in an entire day. Not happening again.

Sweet Tea is fairly easy to make. And though I tease my mother that only her teapot makes good tea, that really isn't so. Any teapot makes good tea, so long as you have the proper ingredients. Give it a try.

Sweet Tea

6 tea bags
1 1/4 cup sugar
water

Place six tea bags in a teapot. These are single tea bags. Fill the kettle with water and bring it to a boil. In the meantime, place the sugar in a gallon container. If you use a glass jar, you might need to put a metal spatula down against the bottom. I don't know why. I only know that if you don't, the glass jar will most likely bust and you will have a big mess.

When the kettle boils, pour the water into the teapot. Then fill the kettle with water again and bring that to a boil. When it's boiling, pour the contents of the teapot into the gallon container. Stir so that the sugar dissolves. Leave the tea bags in the teapot. Pour the boiling water into that teapot.

Let everything cool down. Then pour the teapot contents into the gallon container. Discard the tea bags. Finish filling the gallon container with water. Chill. You've just made Sweet Tea. Pat yourself on the back and have a glass.