The Flavor of Flowers
(Page 3 of 5)
August/September 2004
By JIM LONG
Serving suggestion: Put a sweet-flavored daylily flower (pistils and stamens removed) in a wineglass, then add a scoop of the sorbet. Top with candied lilac blossoms.
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Pineapple-Verbena Sorbet
Serves 4
I served this after a main course of Mexican Mint Chicken Salad, Stuffed Tomatoes and Indian Flat Bread, and before a tantalizing dessert of Lemon Balm Blueberry Cake.
- 3 to 4 fresh lemon verbena leaves, partially cut up
- 1 can frozen pineapple juice concentrate, thawed but still cold
- 2½ cups cold water (or about 2 juice cans of water)
- In blender, place the lemon verbena leaves, pineapple juice concentrate and 1 cup of the cold water. Blend well until the leaves are completely pulverized.
- Add the remaining water and pour the mixture into a hand-cranked or electric sorbet mixer. Freeze until firm.
Serve in previously frozen bowls. (I freeze the spoons, as well.) The sorbet stays firmer that way when serving it on a warm summer day.
Blackberry Basil Sorbet
Serves 4 to 6
I threw this together when some local television photographers came by right before lunchtime. I often try to feed reporters garden fare so they can better understand the garden they are photographing. Blackberries were in season, and the ‘Ruby Queen’ basil was looking especially good. The resulting sorbet has become one of my summer favorites.
- 1 cup water
- 2 cups sugar
- 4 or 5 fresh basil leaves (‘Ruby Queen’, cinnamon or any of your favorite basils work for this)
- 3 cups blackberry juice (use bottled, or make by cooking down fresh or frozen blackberries, straining and reserving the juice, and adding water if needed)
- Juice of ½ lemon
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