Edible flowers – like organic lavender – can add both flavor and elegance to many dishes.
Sorbets, custards, jams, jellies, wines and teas work well with lavender, rose, nasturtium, jasmine, and orange blossom.
The splash of color provided by cornflowers, geraniums, chrysanthemums, and marigolds stimulate the palette – even if their flavors are not very potent.
Follow these tips for top chef cred on the floral front:
- If getting your flowers from the garden, pick early in the day and ideally in dry weather
- Rinse quickly under gently running cool water
- Don’t gather more than one day in advance as the flowers will wilt.
- Remove pistils, stamens and the white part at the base of the petals (known as the ‘heel’, this part will add a bitter flavor if not removed.
- Dry flowers like lavender, hibiscus, heather and rosebuds for out-of-season use; one great options is flavoring sugars…simply grind the dry petals, mix 1 part petal to 4 parts sugar and let it sit for about a month to mellow out the flower’s intense flavor.
As we enjoy the last summer sun, put your love of lavender and respect for raspberry to the test with this summer jam recipe. You’ll need:
- 3 1/16 cups fresh raspberries (you can use frozen if fresh are not in season)
- 2 1/2 cups caster sugar (super fine sugar)
- 1/4 cup dried lavender, heads (stalks removed)
Get the step-by-step ‘how to’ over at food.com, and let us know how it came out right here!
Buy Organic Lavender Flowers for cooking from St. Helena Olive Oil Co., here!
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