Showing posts with label Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flowers. Show all posts

Blood Orange and Lavender Curd



I always look forward to blood orange season. These little jewels brighten the starkness of the mid-winter snow and ice. After trudging through the snow, I arrive home with my precious cargo. I take off my snow boots, my snow covered coat and hat and hang them above the heater to dry. I set the oranges in a hanging basket in the window and I begin to search around the kitchen for inspiration. While searching through cupboards, pantry and spice racks, I see hanging above the basket a bunch of dried lavender, plucked from my garden on a warm summer day. After flipping through over 20 curd recipes, I came up with my recipe for Blood Orange and Lavender Curd. This lovely curd is perfect for cakes, pastries, pies, or slathered on a fresh baked piece of rye bread. 

What You'll Need:

zest of 2 blood oranges
1 cup fresh blood orange juice (about 4 oranges should do the trick)
1 1/2 cups sugar
3/4 cups butter, cut into pieces
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons dried lavender flowers
6 egg yolks


  1. Place all the ingredients in the top of a double boiler (or do what I do and use a metal bowl on top of a sauce pot filled with about 2" of water).
  2. Cook over high heat and whisk until the butter is melted and the ingredients are combined. Once the butter has melted, cook, whisking constantly, for another 10 minutes until thickened. 
  3. To test if the curd is done, coat the back of a wooden spoon with the curd and draw a line with your finger. If the curd falls back in on the line, it is not ready. However, if the line stays clear, the curd is ready.
  4. Pour the curd over a fine mesh sieve into a clean bowl. This curd can be canned and kept for 1 year, or refrigerated for up to 2 weeks.


Yield: About 3 cups

Dandelion Jam



Nothing says spring more to me then seeing green fields freckled with these little yellow flowers. Few people know that dandelions are quite useful in the kitchen. Their leaves are edible and make a great bitter green in tossed salads and their flowers can be used for everything from tea to syrup to jam, hence this recipe. This jam is deliciously light and sweet and goes great with tea cakes and muffins.

What You'll Need

1 cup dandelion flowers*
1 ½ cups water
1 cup sugar
1 package of fruit pectin
3 - 8 oz. canning jars

*Be sure to separate the petals from the green leaves and stalks. This can be quite tedious, but you'll be glad you did. The green bits can impart a bitter flavor to your jam and no one likes bitter jam.

  1. Combine the dandelion petals and water in a large bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. It takes awhile for the delicate flavor of the dandelions to seep into the water, so the longer, the better.
  2. Once you have let your petals soak, strain the mixture and reserve the water.
  3. Place the water and sugar in a saucepot over medium-high heat and stir until the sugar is dissolved.
  4. Once the sugar is completely dissolved, add the pectin and stir until the mixture comes to a boil.
  5. Using a large spoon, scrape any foam that rises off the top. This step is crucial. If you neglect to get rid of the foam, it will settle on the top of your jams resulting in a cloudy mess.
  6. Can immediately and let stand in cans for 24 hours before handling.