Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2016

Homemade Christmas Tea



Introduction:

Now that we are living in California again, there is no Christmas market for us to visit this Advent season. One of our favorite things at the Grenoble Christmas market was the thé du Noël (Christmas tea). The absence of Christmas tea has driven me to scour the internet for recipes. Most American "traditional" recipes included "orange drink mix" as the base ingredient. That is not traditional or acceptable. The recipe I settled on comes from a French blogger (post here). I have translated her recipe to the best of my ability, and have modified it only by the omission of cloves which I do not prefer.

Ingredients:


  • 100 grams black tea (unflavored)
  • 1 orange
  • 1 lemon
  • 1 tsp vanilla powder (not liquid extract)
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground cardamom


Procedure:


  1. Preheat oven to 210 deg F
  2. Wash, dry, and peel orange and lemon into long strips using a potato peeler (be sure to only get the zest and none of the white, which is very bitter)
  3. Cut peel into small even squares
  4. Place peel evenly on a parchment lined baking sheet
  5. Bake peel for 1 hour
  6. Mix dry ingredients together and add dried peel once baked.
  7. Boil water and steep like normal black tea (1 tsp tea/cup, steep 5 mins)
  8. Store in a metal tin for longevity
  9. Enjoy!

Results and Observations:

C'était bon ! (It was delicious!). The tea turned out very well. This tea can be enjoyed as is without further modification.

However, what fun would this be without a little experimentation? The citrus flavors were not very pronounced, so I think I will try increasing that. The vanilla was also not very strong (but a critical background flavor?), so I may try omitting it in the future (also, vanilla powder is somewhat pricey)

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Candy Cane Chocolate Chip Cookies: baking fail

Candy Cane Chocolate Chip Cookies

The idea seemed simple enough: add crushed candy cane to chocolate chip cookie dough. For this experiment, I used my standard chocolate chip cookie recipe.

I had high hopes for this batch (see fig 1.) of hybrid candy cane chocolate chip cookies. As you will see, the results differed from my expectations and proved my hypothesis, that adding crushed candy cane would create a simple Christmas variation of this classic cookie, very wrong. We have to be honest when our plans go awry.


Figure 1.

Results and Observations:

The candy cane bits melted during the baking process, leaving gaping holes in the cookies, and adhered to the cookie sheet which resulted in fractured cookies when attempting to move them to the cooling rack.

Thankfully the candy cane modification was only added to twelve cookies (see fig 2). The rest of the dough served as a control group and yielded wonderful and normal chocolate chip cookies.


Figure 2. The results of Trial 1 candy cane cookies



Figure 3.