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

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Best Juicer Recipes EVER! ~ The Pink Lady with Pomegranate and Grapefruit




This is one of my favorite juicer recipes, not least because it's so pretty! But of course, if you add together three lovely pink things - pomegranate, grapefruit, and a pink lady apple - you're going to get something pretty! I'm sure this juice is great anytime, but I think it's especially nice in the winter when fresh produce is so sparse, and pomegranates and citrus are just coming into season. In the doldrums of yet MORE winter vegetables, this sparkly, tangy pink juice is a treat!


Best Juicer Recipes EVER! ~ The Pink Lady

I have heard that some people have trouble juicing fresh pomegranate arils (the seeds), and I think this is a juicer by juicer problem. I have a Jack LaLanne power juicer AND a Breville Juicer, and I have never had a problem with either. If anything, I feel like the arils sometimes go through the juicer too fast and don't get quite all the juice extracted, if you can call that a problem.

1 pomegranite, seeds removed and collected (about 1 cup)
1 large pink grapefruit, peeled with a kitchen knife
1 pink lady apple
optional: small sprig rosemary

Run the ingredients through your juicer according to your manufacturers directions, starting with the least juicy, and moving to the most juicy, to ensure any reside of the less juicy ingredients is washed into the cup by the more juicy ingredients: rosemary (if using) pomegranate, grapefruit, pink lady apple. Serve over ice, and garnish with fresh rosemary or a few extra pomegranate arils. Enjoy!










Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Grilled Tuscan Lemon Chicken with Garlic and Rosemary • Grilled Chicken at its Best!

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Hi Readers. I'm sorry I just basically disappeared for two weeks, but you know, it was August. And August is hot. And when it's hot, I lay on the couch and eat popsicles all day, and then after that I go somewhere air-conditioned like the mall, because it's so hot. I do not sit around in my hot hot house and blog for you, because I am selfish like that. Sorry.

But now it's September! The month of pumpkin spice lattes, crisp autumn leaves, snuggly sweaters and scarves, and fresh notebooks full of crisp white paper ready for a school years worth of notes! I love September. (And true to form, we had a chilly overcast marine layer all summer and them today was THE hottest day of the entire year. Thanks California! Love how you never go with the seasons like everywhere else does! Stay classy!) And with September comes more recipes. That's right - I'm blogging even though it's the hottest day of the year. That's how committed I am to September people!



And here is a recipe for you. This recipe is seriously the best grilled chicken I have ever had. Pardon me if I tread on your toes, but generally I really don't like grilled chicken. It's just always so dry and so bland, and the only thing that gives it any interest at all is barbecue sauce, and that generally only makes it edible - hardly delicious. And yet for whatever reason, this recipe is so moist and tender, and busting with flavor. It's so delicious! And the lemon garlic sauce is seriously to die for. We served this with roasted potatoes and grilled veggies and it was an absolutely delicious meal.

Tuscan Lemon Chicken with Garlic Rosemary Sauce
adapted from Barefoot Contessa at Home, By Garten

Ok, don't freak out because this recipe calls for a whole stick of butter. When you divide that up amongst all the people eating (not to mention that part that is most regrettably left in the pan) it really comes out to very little. and it's SO delicious. And honestly, in the grand scheme of things? A little butter in not so bad. It much, much less bad than a fast food hamburger, or a candy bar, or a soda, and I bet you have that every now and then, don't you?

Ingredients
1 3.5ish pound chicken (fyi, I am sure you could make this with any other cut of chicken from the grocer - I just happen to love that it works with whole chicken so well, because it's the cheapest by far! I also love to save the bones from whole chickens for stock!)

1/3 cup good olive oil
zest of two lemons
1/3 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
3-4 large cloves fresh garlic, minced or passed through a garlic press
2 tbs finely chopped fresh rosemary leaves
1 stick unsalted butter
freshly ground pepper
kosher salt
1 lemon, halved

1. (This is the grossest step, fyi, but it really makes it easy to grill!) Rinse chicken and pat dry. With a pair of cooking shears (or a VERY clean pair of scissors - wash them with dish-soap or run them through the dishwasher - Or of all else fails, a large cooking knife), cut out the backbone of the chicken (I always throw it in a ziplock bag in the freezer for stock). I just cut right up each side of the chicken. Trim any large chucks of excess fat. Spread the chicken open, cavity side down, and press down firmly with the hell of your palm, until the chicken is flat. Sprinkle both sides generously with salt and pepper

2. In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, rosemary, and 1 tsp pepper. Place chicken in a large 1 gallon ziplock bag, and pour marinade over chicken. Seal bag, removing as much air as possible, and turn to coat. Refridgerate chicken a minimum of 4 hours, but up to overnight, turning once or twice.

3. When ready to grill, heat grill to medium high. Remove chicken from bag, saving whatever juices are left over in the bag, and place chicken on the grill skin side up. Cook 15 - 25 minutes, until golden brown (adjust heat if necessary if chicken browns too quickly or begins to burn. Grills can be so different from one another!). Turn the chicken skin side down, and cook for another 15 - 20 minutes, until skin is brown and crisp, and meat is cooked through. Grill the lemon halves, cut side down, for the last 10 minutes of cooking.

4. Remove chicken from heat, and let rest on a cutting board (tented with foil or something like that, so it doesn't get cold) 5 minutes. Remember that left over marinade? I hope you saved it! In a small saucepan, combine leftover marinade, butter, and any juices from chicken resting place. Heat, and bring to a boil, whisking to combine. Chop the chicken into 4 pieces, and top with garlic rosemary sauce. Enjoy!

Monday, August 10, 2009

Raspberry Zinger Iced Tea with Lemon Simple Syrup

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One of the biggest perks of the July "eating-in" challenge, in which we approximately zero dollars eating out, is that it broke my Starbucks dependency (or Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, or Peets, ad infinitum. I use "Starbucks" as a catch-all for fancy espresso venues, because Starbucks is ubiquitous and everyone knows what I'm talking about). And let's be honest, it's not like I was spending a bushel at Starbucks every month. In fact, my monthly Starbucks bill usually only comes to about $25. And since I don't exactly indulge in any other vices (other than gratuitous amounts of butter, that is) I don't really have a problem with my liquid caffeine habit. EXCEPT....

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Why spend $3 for one cup of their fantastic Passion Iced Tea, when I can make an equally fantastic entire gallon of Raspberry Zinger Iced Tea at home for only... $4? Let's break it down, shall we? If you make your own iced tea, it costs $.25 a cup, or $4 a gallon ($3.50 for the box of tea bags, $.50 for the sugar, lemon, and water). If you buy Starbucks iced tea, (assuming you are paying $3 for a venti, which has about 2 cups of liquid in it, + ice), you are paying $1.50 a cup, or $24 a gallon. $24 a gallon!? If gas or milk cost that much, there would be riots in the streets.

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I'm still going to be purchasing my espresso beverages at a coffee bar because let's be honest, I don't have a $5,000 espresso machine at home, but during August, when the sweltering dog days of summer are upon us, I need a refreshing iced beverage every day. And I need that refreshing iced beverage to be, um, affordable. If I bought a glass of iced at at Starbucks every day during August (let's assume it's a venti), I would be spending... $93 on iced tea! Yikes! If I made my own tea at home (let's assume I drink an equivalent amount, 2 cups) I'll only be spending $15.50 for the month. Multiply that out over the whole summer, and I'll be saving myself ...$232.50. That's more than a season pass to Disneyland! Hmmm...

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Raspberry Zinger Iced Tea with Lemon Simple Syrup

We have been making quite a lot of iced tea this summer, but this one has been my favorite by far, which is why I am sharing it with you! I used Celestial Seasonings "Lemon Zinger" iced tea because I like the tart taste of the raspberries and lemons together, but you can use whatever sort of iced tea you want.

When Nate makes the lemon simple syrup, he likes to shake it in a martini shaker with ice to cool it down more quickly. I, personally, can wait the 1/2 an hour it takes to cool down, but if you are impatient like he is, go right ahead and shake away.

Ingredients
1 box Celestial Seasonings "Raspberry Zinger" tea bags
1 gallon + 1 cup filtered water
2 lemons
1 cup sugar

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Fill a pitcher with 1 gallon filtered water (I have a very handy iced tea pitcher with a lid and a spigot, but any sort of pitcher will do. Just be sure to cover the top while the tea is steeping, so no bugs or dirt get it).


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Immerse 1 box Raspberry Zinger tea bags to water. Set in a sunny place, and let steep a minimum if 4 hours.


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Meanwhile, mix 1 cup filtered water, 1 cup white sugar, and the juice of 1 lemon in a small saucepan. Heat over high heat, stirring constantly until the sugar dissolves into the water, and the mixture is clear. Remove from heat, and let cool. Can be stored in the fridge indefinitely (we keep ours in an old salad dressing bottle with the labels removed).


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When tea is finished steeping, remove tea bags from water. Slice up 1 lemon and add to tea.

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Store in the fridge indefinitely. Enjoy!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Homemade Lemon Verbena and Mint Lemonaid

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You know that old saying, that when life gives you lemons, make lemonaid? Well life gave us lemons.

Literally.

So we made some lemonaid.

The recession being the big ugly uncle it promised to be, a restaurant owned by some folks we know just went out of business. We visited them the other day, and their house was jammed with a wild mishmash of kitchen innards: refrigerators, an assortment of tongs and other tools, a large box of every flavor of syrup under the sun - everything you could possibly think of that you might need to run a restaurant kitchen. And on the front step? A very, very large box of lemons.

So we took a big bag home. And then they sat on the counter for what seemed like FOREVER. I just couldn't make up my mind! There are so many wonderful things to do with lemons, it's totally ridiculous, but the OPTIONS! were! paralyzing! me!


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Then I found myself in the grocery store earlier this week, parked in front of a big frosty freezer case. It's been SO hot lately, it felt good to let the icy air gush over me as I looked for a non-lethal can of frozen juice mix. When you've got a diet restriction like me, it's important to read the labels on EVERYTHING processed so no-one sneaks one past you and you end up eating something that will, you know, kill you. All I wanted was, you know, something kind of natural? Something that didn't have corn syrup, citric acid, and yellow food coloring as the three main ingredients? Something with actual JUICE in it? And you know what? I don't know if it's just that I shop at the ghetto grocery store of Huntington Beach, but there wasn't a single can of juice there that fit the bill. Not a single one! Maybe if I went to the hoity toity grocery store by the harbor I might find fancier frozen juice (if they even deigned to carry such a product) but they sure didn't have it here.

And then it hit me like the side of a barn. HELLO? You only have about 20 pounds of lemons sitting on your countertop. Makes some lemonaid from LEMONS already!

So I did.

But I couldn't resist fancying it up, so I crushed up some lemon verbena and some mint leaves and added them in too. And you know what? It was good. Really good. Much better than corn syrup + citirc acid + yellow food coloring. And probably about a million times healtier what with all those vitamins and minerals and stuff (I don't think it's coincidental that food that TASTES better also happens to be better FOR you!) So next time you're contemplating a frosty can of lemon flavored liquid corn syrup, put the can back in the freezer case and walk to the produce department and buy some LEMONS. You can do it!

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Homemade Lemon Verbena and Mint Lemonaid
Makes 1 gallon


You probably want to use at least one organic lemon if you want to leave the peel on and slice one up and let it float around the top all pretty. However, I didn't. And look! We're still alive and have not yet sprouted additional limbs!

I grew the lemon verbena and mint myself - I bought this fun little mint container at my local Trader Joe's a few weeks ago - it has lemon verbena, sweet mint, and pineapple mint in it. I love it! Growing fresh herbs yourself is so easy. Can you grow weeds? Because if you can grow weed, you can grow herbs. Really, they're nothing but fragrant, tasty weeds. I can't even fathom why they charge so much for them at the grocery store. The things are impossible to kill and it costs less to buy the whole living plant than cuttings from them. Grow your own in a pot in the windowsill. It's nice!


ingredients
17 lemons
2.5 cups of sugar
cold filtered water
1 lemon verbena sprig
2 mint sprigs

a 1 gallon container (I like my iced tea jug)


method



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Reserve one lemon for garnish. Juice 16 lemons using an electric juicer or hand juicer. Discard or compost peels. Pour lemon juice into 1 gallon jug.



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Thoroughly wash remaining lemon to remove dirt and/or pesticides. Slice crosswise into 1/4 inch slices and add to lemon juice in jug.



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rinse 1 sprig lemon verbena and 2 sprigs mint in cool water. Remove leaves from stem and discards stems.



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crush lemon verbena and mint with a mortar and pestle, or with your fingers.



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In a medium sauce pan, ombine 2.5 cups sugar with 2 cups water. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly until sugar is dissolved. Reduce to a simmer and add lemon verbena and mint. Simmer 2-3 minutes, until herbs are soft and bright green.



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Remove syrup from heat. Add syrup to the lemon juice. Stir to combine. Fill jug the rest of the way with cold filtered water. Stir thoroughly to combine. Serve chilled over ice. Be extra fancy and add a little sprig of lemon verbena or mint. Voila! Lemonaid. Don't you feel accomplished?

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Easy Peasy Blender Hollandaise Sauce with Tangerines and Lemon

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I'm going to tease you with eggs benedict but not give you a recipe until tomorrow. Aren't I mean? I'm so mean. Watch me being so mean. Can I console you a hollandaise sauce recipe? Because you have to make hollandaise if you are going to make eggs benedict, right? See, there's a purpose to the meanness.

Hollandaise sauce makes me so happy. So lemony, so buttery, so velvety drizzled over asparagus or poached eggs. It's just, you know, such a hassle to make. And sometimes, it doesn't come out and it curdles. And it doesn't keep well, so you have to eat ALL of it or else throw it away. It's kind of a bummer.

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Luckily we can have it when we have brunch at a fancy restaurant, right? WRONG. Honestly, you should never eat restaurant hollandaise sauce. Ever, ever. Just, go read Kitchen Confidential and you'll understand. Mmm. Bacteria soup. So healthful. (Sarcasm friends, in case you weren't sure).

All of that conspires together to mean that I only ever enjoy hollandaise sauce about once a year.

Until now.

This particular recipe is easy peasy. Seriously! All you need is a whisk and a blender. I have never made an easier hollandaise sauce, and it keeps like a dream. You know what that means? I CAN HAVE IT EVERY SINGLE DAY. Um, until it runs out I guess. But I have a container of it in my fridge right now, ready to be drizzled over my next poached egg on hot buttered toast (hallelujah!).

You better believe I am going to enjoy it.




Easy Peasy Hollandaise Sauce with Tangerines and Lemon
Adapted from Martha Stewart Living


Ingredients
5 tbs tangerine juice
(from fresh, ripe tangerines, if possible.)
3 tbs lemon juice
2 tbs water
5 large eggs
1/4 tsp white wine vinegar (or other white vinegar)
salt
1.5 cups butter (3 sticks, or 3/4 lb), just melted

Stuff you Need
A wisk
a small sauce pan
a blender



Method


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Take your 5 teaspoons of tangerine juice



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And your 2 tablespoons of lemon juice Combine 5 tablespoons tangerine juice with 2 tablespoons lemon juice in a small bowl.



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Got your five eggs? Separate the yolks from the whites. I do this by straining them through my fingers. But do it however you like. And save those whites for an omelet or something. No need to be wasteful.



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Combine five egg yolks in a small saucepan with 2 tablespoons of water. Whisk constantly over VERY LOW HEAT (the lowest your burners will go), until yolks are frothy, and just starting to thicken. Remove from heat, and add 1/2 of the tangerine-lemon juice mixture to stop the cooking. Continue to whisk constantly.



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Put the mixture into your blender, and add remaining juice mixture, 1/4 teaspoon vinegar, and a pinch of salt. Puree.



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Reduce blender speed to low. In a slow stream, add three sticks of melted butter. If necessary, add butter in batches, pureeing on low between batches.



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Drizzle over something yummy.



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And look how well it stores! Still liquid and drizzleable, even when cold! See, I'm not really mean. I am so nice to you. You may now shower me with appreciation.


enjoy!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Meyer Lemon Semifreddo

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What can I say? I know it's only March. I KNOW. I am fully aware of the fact that very large parts of the country are probably covered in snow, or ice, or whatever it is that happens in places where it's cold. But here in California? It was 80 degrees today. It was a great day for ice-cream.

We went down to Seal Beach today where Nate was learning to surf. Believe it or not, not everyone who lives in California knows how to surf. Although we have lived here all our lives, we only just got around to the surfing, well, now. I, personally, hate the ocean. Ok, well I don't hate the ocean per se, I mean I like that it's there, I just don't see any point in going into it. It's wet. And it's cold. And it's salty. And there are fish in it. Ew.


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This is Nate giving me the look that says, "I've been surfing for 4 hours, I will humor you with that camera for about 5 seconds woman."


Today happened to be the big "Polar Bear Plunge" event in Seal Beach. Apparently, this is a BIG DEAL. There were camera crews, a helicopter, photographers, sections of the beach roped off, a fire-truck, paramedics, tons of life guards on surf-boards, and of course, a huge crowd perched on the pier ready to cheer the swimmers on. At the signal, a crowd of participants dressed in bathing suits and costumes, some of them even waving plungers, rushed into the water and started jumping up and down in the waves. Polar Bear Plunge my foot. It was 80 degrees outside!


Time for ice-cream. This is meyer lemon semifreddo. Because even though it's cold everywhere else, ice-cream season is here for California!

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Meyer Lemon Semifreddo

I'm not going to lie: I was totally inspired for this desert by these gorgeous pictures over at Canelle et Vanille. My goodness! Looking at those I think I've died and gone to dessert heaven. However, (and I know this is me being a stupid American), I can't even begin to figure out how many egg yolks 40 grams equals, and although I looked at two grocery stores (even the healthy ones which carry odd products!) I couldn't find glucose for the life of me. So I played around with this recipe instead.

OMG. This was so simple! And what a big payoff in terms of taste and texture! Why have I never tried this before? It's like eating a cloud! It's very different from traditional ice-cream; it's much lighter and fluffier. Two thumbs definitely way up.

This is my adaptation of the recipe from epicurious.com.


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For this recipe, you need 1 3/4 cups chilled heavy whipping cream, 1 1/4 cups white sugar, 7 large egg yolks, 3 mayer lemons (substitute regular lemons in you can't find meyers, but it WILL be more acidic.) and a pinch of salt. (I found that this time, my meyer lemons were VERY sweet and mild. Next time I might do halvsies with real lemons to get a tarter flavor and balance out the sweet).

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First thing to do is zest those lemons. Then juice them.


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Whip the cream with an electric mixer until soft peaks form. Transfer to another bowl, and refrigerate.

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Combine eggs, sugar, and lemon juice in a heat-proof bowl (I use my mixer bowl) and whisk to combine.

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Place the bowl over simmering water, and whisk constantly until it reaches 170 degrees, about 4 minutes. (I set a timer!) OR, if you don't have a candy thermometer, whisk until the sugar is dissolved into the egg yolks, and the mixture is hot to the touch.

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Remove from the heat, and beat mixture on high for about 6 minutes (set a timer), until the mixture is cool, doubles in volume, and is pale and taffy-like.

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Gently fold in 2 tbs of the lemon curd.

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Gently fold in the whipped cream.

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Mmmmmm.

Line a loaf pan with plastic wrap. Spoon semifreddo batter into loaf pan. Stick in the back of the freezer, and let harden for at least 8 hours, up to overnight.

To serve, remove from freezer and cut in slices. top with fresh berries, lemon zest, or almonds. Enjoy!

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Saturday, February 21, 2009

how to make candied citrus peel

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Lately I've been on a "use the whole lemon" kick. I know! It sounds crazy, right? Eating the skin of a lemon, or an orange or a grapefruit for that matter, sounds more like a punishment than a treat, right? But seriously, I was so wrong. Using the whole fruit is very, very good. I've got so many places to go with this, and I'm going to be blogging about it over the next couple of weeks as soon as I am done tinkering with the recipes, but for now let me just say that using a whole citrus fruit is absolutely brilliant. Whoever thought that up deserves a big hot kiss from Clive Owen ::swoon:: Unless, I guess, that person is also a man, and doesn't swing that way. In which case, Jessica Alba. Ok, still not interested? Maybe just a lovely box of chocolates and a week in Paris. Unless you live there already, in which case I guess it's not exactly a reward. How did this get so complicated again?

ANYWAY.

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Using the whole citrus fruit is like having little bits of zingy candy in every bite of your dish, and it makes a ho-hum-had-it-a-thousand-times dessert really sing with new life. Serve it, and your friends and family will be begging you for the recipe and throwing themselves at your feet as they worship you for the domestic goddess that you are. And all because you used a whole lemon. Really, after all that can you afford not to try?

So, after all that hoopla about using the whole lemon, I'm NOT going to use the whole lemon in this recipe. Wait, what? I know, aren't I mean? You'll just have to come back next time, because today we are talking about the part that doesn't usually get used: citrus rinds. You know, that stuff most people (sad, sorry ignorant people) usually toss? Well it's a shame so much of it ends up in the waste bin, because with a little bit of attention those rinds could be turned into something super tasty. From now on, whenever I use a piece of citrus that doesn't call for the whole fruit, I'm going to pop those rinds in the freezer to candy later.

Ok! Lets get started!

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Candied Citrus Peel

I don't know why candying citrus peel sounds so scary. I know it took me ages to try it, but once I did I realized it was a piece of cake. Be prepared: It takes a while to do it right. It doesn't take a lot of actual hands on time, but there IS a lot of blanching, and the candies need to "rest" overnight. These are ideal to make while you are making something else (dinner maybe?) so give yourself some time and don't rush. making candy should be fun.

The ingredients for these are ridiculously simple. You need the following: water, white sugar, citrus. That's it! If you want to, you can also use a few drop of food coloring.

First, you need some citrus. I am using 6 blood oranges. If you want to use lemons, make it 8, if limes, make it 14 (those little buggers are small), if regular oranges make it 5, and if grapefruit make it 4.

the first thing you want to do is wash your oranges, and cut off the little nubby tops.

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Now cut your oranges into quarters. Wow, aren't blood oranges spectacular?

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Now we are going to "supreme" the oranges (sort of). This is fancy for "cut out the flesh of the oranges." It's pretty easy. Just do it like this:

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There might be a little flesh left in the skin (does anyone else feel like this is a little graphic sounding for a candy recipe? flesh, skin? blood oranges? I'm just saying...) So if there is, scrape it out with a spoon. And don't throw that stuff away - save it something else. I'm making mine into marmalade!

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Now you should have some clean skins. Repeat, until all your oranges are done.

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Once all your oranges are skinned, slice them lengthwise into strips about 1/3".
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Now get a stock pot and put those babies in.

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Fill the pot with cold water until the rinds are covered by 1" of water. Why are we doing this? Good question! The white part of the orange is very bitter and not too tasty. Some people just cut it out before candying, but then you have very wimpy peels that fall apart easily. We don't want wimpy peels, so we are going to be soaking the rinds in water and then blanching them to remove that bitter taste.
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Let the rinds sit in the cold water for 1 hour. Then, drain them in a colander.
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Now for the blanching. Fill the pot up with cold water again, until the rinds are covered with 1" of water. Now bring the water to a boil, and boil those rinds for 20 minutes. Why are we doing this? Well this blanching helps get rid of the bitter taste of the white pith. If we didn't do this, our candy would probably be inedible, and that would be sad. The blanching is really key to getting a great candy.


Once the candy has been blanched for 20 minutes, drain it in a colander again. OMG? Where did all the color go? My peels have certainly lightened up a bit.
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Now repeat the blanching TWO MORE TIMES. Yep, that's right, I said TWO MORE TIMES. Dude! That's a lot of blanching. But it's necessary. Don't skip. You'll be sorry.


Ok, all done now? Let those rinds just sit in the colander, while we make the syrup. You will need 3 cups of water and 3 cups of white sugar. We are going to be making sugar syrup. Mix those two together in the stock pot. You may also want to use some food coloring. I used two drops of red, one drop of yellow, and one drop of pink. But you can do whatever you want. I think pink limes would look weird anyway.
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Now bring the sugar-water to a boil. At was at this point I discovered my candy thermometer was broken (At sea level water DOES boil at 212 degrees, not 175, correct?). I think this just goes to show that you can, indeed, candy stuff without a candy thermometer. But it would be a lot easier with one. If you have one, boil it until it reaches 220 degrees. If you don't, boil it for about 25 minutes.
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Now add the peels to the syrup. Mmm. so pretty. Remember all that blanching we did? Well it opened up the pores of the lemon skin (seriously, I feel like I'm talking about facials, not candy), so that all that syruppy goodness can be absorbed. Aren't you glad we did it now?
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Put the peels and the syrup back on the heat, and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat (we don't want the syrup to thicken up just yet), and simmer the peels in the syrup for 45 minutes, until they start to look translucent. Here's mine after its 45 minutes simmer:
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Now for the boring part. Let peel cool, and leave it alone overnight on the stove, uncovered. Don't mess with it, just leave it alone. Come back tomorrow, peel needs a good long time to soak up that all that sweet goodness.


Day 2


Get some draining apparatus ready. I think a wire rack with parchment paper underneath it works great. If you don't have one, just put down some parchment paper.


Reheat the peel, and bring it back to a boil. Using your candy thermometer, boil the syrup until it reaches 228 degrees. Unless, of course, your thermometer is broken in which case you are going to heat the peel to the "soft ball" stage. How do you tell if the sugar is at the "soft ball" stage? Well, take a spoon and put a little drop of syrup into a bowl of ice-water. It's done when it forms a soft little ball. It's over-done if it forms a hard little ball, It's not done yet if it just turns into liquid and mixes with the water.

Once the syrup reaches the soft-ball stage, turn off the heat, and strain the peel out of the syrup (most of the syrup may have been absorbed by the peel though). Drain on a wire rack. I think mine look a little bit like french fries.
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Let the candies dry for 1 hour. The will begin to harden, and won't be so sticky. Now roll those babies in sugar. Voila! You are done! Candied citrus peel. Lots of steps, but quite a bit easier than you thought, wasn't it?
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Now put those is a pretty jar and serve them on top of blood orange sorbet, or, you know, just gobble them up plain. It's really up to you.

enjoy!

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