Tiki Central / Tiki Drinks and Food
To make Hibiscus grenadine.
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 8:10 AM
So Kkocka I think it was, asked how to find Hibiscus grenadine. How To Deseed a Pomegranate After you deseed you then Squeeze the juice out using cheese cloth into a bowl. Did add some vanilla sugar too cuz I like it. |
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wizzard419
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 12:35 PM
Hmmm... that may be too loose to be grenadine. I would say buy pomegranate juice (cooking will lose any of the fresh flavor qualities anyway) and simmer the hibiscus/Jamaica (in markets they are frequently labeled Jamaica and cost about a quarter of what "Dried Hibiscus Flowers" cost)for about 20 mins. Then strain out the flowers, add the sugar, and reduce. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 4:18 PM
"(in markets they are frequently labeled Jamaica and cost about a quarter of what "Dried Hibiscus Flowers" cost)" Good to know I will try this. "Hmmm... that may be too loose to be grenadine." "Would say buy pomegranate juice (cooking will lose any of the fresh flavor qualities anyway" I should have been more clear on that part as I don't cook the juice because it does mess with the flavor. "I would say buy pomegranate juice" One more thing, |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 4:40 PM
See Jamaica here on Amazon. Looks like it's good for you too. Health Benefits of Jamaica aka Hibiscus Flowers... Jamaican is high in Vitamins and Minerals with powerful antioxidant properties. It helps lower elevated blood pressure, bad cholesterol and detoxify the entire body. Antioxidant levels in Agua de Jamaica are higher than vegetable juice, tomato juice and orange juice; and compares to Cranberry Juice and Pomegranate Juice with more antioxidant levels than these juices. The antioxidant properties in Jamaica juice helps provide our bodies with protection against free radicals, molecules which cause heart disease, stroke, hypertension, Alzheimer’s, premature aging and cancer. Jamaica juice also helps flush the prostate, the liver, kidney and bladder. Since Jamaica is high in electrolytes such as chloride, magnesium, potassium and sodium, the tea or juice can be used to replenish electrolytes in the body after exercise, a day in the sun or a long day on the beach. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 4:42 PM
One more, Aqua de Jamaica Recipe Jamaica juice is a healthy and refreshing Mexican tradition 1 ¼ cup of dried Jamaica Flowers
Have other health benefits that we missed in our description of Agua de Jamaica? Let us know what your additional health benefits are and your recipe for Jamaica juice! |
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wizzard419
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 7:37 PM
Your spice dealer is gouging you for inferior product. The one issue with you juicing your own poms and not cooking it is that you are dramatically reducing shelf life and supermarkets stock pom brand juice, plus they have coupons all the time. I usually just eat the seeds from the tree I have and stick to the pasteurized juice for when I want stuff for syrups. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 8:12 PM
"dramatically reducing shelf life" "Your spice dealer is gouging you for inferior product." "I usually just eat the seeds from the tree I have" |
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wizzard419
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Mon, Nov 24, 2014 8:20 PM
Cooking it (bringing it to the correct temperature even) would save you the eventual risk of having to toss out a batch because it spoiled in the freezer. Yes, things only have a few months shelf life in a properly set up freezer. Pre-ground is generally a bad choice for any spice as unless it is ground to order and used in an equally brief timeframe you will lose much of the flavor. The key is "Was", harvest time for me is roughly mid October, there isn't much to show since they are more or less hedges... |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 5:50 AM
Wow thanks for the photo! This Pomegranate grenadine does not last long here. Plus I seal with one of these to help with freezer burn. |
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wizzard419
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 12:27 PM
It depends on the cultivar and rootstock, a dwarf one (as seen above) can easily produce 50 or so pieces a year, a larger one can go past 100. Buying an $800 cryovac sealer seems like overkill for the home cook, unless you're running a full butcher shop out of the back. |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 5:08 PM
"overkill for the home cook" Ha! that's me, I'm all about overkill. Cooking was a hobby and Occupation / livelihood long before tiki so I have way less into Cooking really. Guess you won't be buying this then. |
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wizzard419
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 5:49 PM
Molecular gastronomy is too much of a gimmick right now for it to be a serious contender. I also despise how sous vide is being hailed as some kind of saving way for people to not fuck up cooking meat, it sort of does it but not really since you will still be searing it to make the outside not look terrible and there are many characteristics lost by not cooking it the entire time on that surface. |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 9:01 PM
"saving way for people to not fuck up cooking meat" Well meat would not be my first choice of foods to cook. But would want to do vegies and other stuff but again have not got that far. "Molecular gastronomy is too much of a gimmick" True, but if you think about it Tiki or Polynesian restaurants were a gimmick too. The bloom is off the rose. |
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wizzard419
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Tue, Nov 25, 2014 9:19 PM
They still are a gimmick, their 90's incarnation was "Pan-Asian" and in the early to mid 2000's it was called "Asian-Fusion". All incorporate things and add soy sauce but make it geared towards the American palate. The cocktails were mostly on shaky ground too since they were not as much balanced for flavor of the spirit as much as either getting you wasted, covering up the taste with sweet, or making them visually appealing over anything else. Which is funny when award-winning new tiki drinks like "Death in the South Pacific" don't appear to get a mention here. |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Nov 26, 2014 7:08 AM
"Which is funny when award-winning new tiki drinks like "Death in the South Pacific" don't appear to get a mention here." Here is the problem it's not a west coaster that made the drink, had it been one it would have been on TC tiki mag, EVERYWEHERE. (was created by Washington bartender Evan Martin) I like the dead man garnish on this drink. http://www.amountainofcrushedice.com/?p=9298 Death in the South Pacific – By Evan Martin 0.75 oz. Appleton Estate Extra 12 Year Old rum 0.75 oz. Rhum Clement VSOP rum 0.5 oz. Grand Marnier 0.33 oz. Trader Tiki’s Orgeat Syrup 0.33 oz. Fee Brothers Falernum 3 dashes Absinthe 0.5 oz. Fresh Lime Juice 0.5 oz. Fresh Lemon Juice 0.5 oz. Fee Brothers Grenadine 0.5 oz. Cruzan Blackstrap rum Add all ingredients except for the grenadine and Cruzan Blackstrap to a Zombie shell glass and fill with crushed ice. Swizzle the drink well to mix and frost the glass and then pour in grenadine. Overfill the glass with crushed ice and then pour in Cruzan Blackstrap. Garnish: Take a bamboo skewer and put a brandied cherry through at the very top followed by 1 pineapple leaf (insert through the middle) and then cut off skin from 1 large orange slice and then cut the strips in half. Insert the ends through the skewer having them hang on opposite sides of each other. Then insert the straw through the loop in the bamboo skewer. It should look like a guy hanging off of the drink (cherry=head, pineapple leaf= arms, citrus peel dangling away from each other are the legs) Evan explains: “The drink’s name is a play on Love in the South Pacific and Death in the Afternoon. I found the name fitting as it’s modeled after the Zombie (use of absinthe, good amount of citrus balanced by various sweeteners, and needed a name that gave as much warning as the zombie) as well as its color (should be a light tan with a muddy and bloody looking float) and the death in the afternoon’s use of absinthe.” [ Edited by: tikiskip 2014-11-26 07:14 ] |
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wizzard419
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Wed, Nov 26, 2014 5:34 PM
Anyway... |
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Atomic Tiki Punk
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Wed, Nov 26, 2014 5:56 PM
This reeks of Hipster mixology and though it makes no logical sense The cat's in the bag [ Edited by: Atomic Tiki Punk 2014-11-26 17:58 ] |
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tikiskip
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Thu, Nov 27, 2014 7:46 AM
If I were a computer wiz like you I would pull up Jack Nicholson's I like this one too. History will be kind to me for I intend to write it HAPPY THANKSGIVING! ATP. Thank you for your input wizzard419 I was able to find the Jamaica at a Mexican Grocery store |
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wizzard419
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Thu, Nov 27, 2014 8:59 AM
That gif was in response to your exact sentence... please feel free to review what you wrote. :D |
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tikiskip
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Thu, Nov 27, 2014 11:09 AM
I was being funny, not mad at ATP, or any one really. |
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Colin
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Fri, Nov 28, 2014 1:17 AM
My hibiscus grenadine recipe: 1 part pomegranate-cherry 50-50 Pom Wonderful (can use all pomegranate if you prefer) Heat together on stove. Add a bit of orange flower water to round it off. With the cherry and orange elements, it's easy to turn into fassionola by mixing it with raspberry syrup. |
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Atomic Tiki Punk
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Fri, Nov 28, 2014 3:44 AM
I totally got it! |
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tikiskip
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Fri, Nov 28, 2014 7:11 AM
Thanx for adding that Colin! Your version looks good and makes me think a dash of lemon to cut some of the sweet may be a good thing to add as well. |
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tikiskip
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Fri, Nov 28, 2014 7:16 AM
Does anybody have a way to press the juice out of cane sugar, like the cane. Would be fun to try to juice this raw cane as I now see it every now and then in stores. |
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wizzard419
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Fri, Nov 28, 2014 8:47 AM
Cane crushers are the only way to do it. You can check out the large number of people who apparently ruin their juicers and such trying to find ways to not buy the crusher. Though... why do you want cane juice? If it is to use as a sweetener, you would need to reduce it and at that point you would have the same product as cane syrup. |
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tikiskip
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Sat, Nov 29, 2014 5:56 AM
At a restaurant called cuba libre they made drinks with it. And I know it was a gimmick, but they were good. |
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wizzard419
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Sat, Nov 29, 2014 9:45 AM
Check your local farmer's market. If you have a population of people from SE Asia in the area there will likely be a vendor there right now selling the crushed cane juice. |
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thePorpoise
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Sat, Nov 29, 2014 10:54 PM
i've walked up to cuban lunch counters in miami that will crush up a cane juice drink for you. |
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mikehooker
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Tue, Feb 16, 2016 9:35 PM
Anyone else have a hibiscus grenadine recipe they wanna share? Lei Low in Houston gave me a bottle of theirs and it was floral and delicious. Makes me never wanna make the typical Pom juice/sugar kind ever again. Curious what variations are out there. |
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PalmtreePat
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Wed, Feb 17, 2016 7:21 AM
I've started making mine with about 1/3 of the sugar substituted for brown sugar after spotting a product that touted it's use of brown sugar as a selling point. Makes it "heavier" for lack of a better word, which is good for drinks where you're doling it out in teaspoons or quarter ounces. I also always use 1 ounce of brandy per 10 ounces of syrup as the preservative and season it with 4 drops of orange flower water. Also for those of us living near Sprout's markets, they sell whole dried hibiscus there at a much more reasonable price than other grocers, and mexican markets often sell teabags of crushed up flowers in the same section that they stock yerba buena and such. |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Feb 17, 2016 8:31 AM
Sounds good Pat. Or even coconut sugar that stuff is cool too. |
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PalmtreePat
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Thu, Feb 18, 2016 4:51 PM
I think the agave would be tasty, but to keep the final product "syrupy" in consistency I would reduce the pomegranite-hibiscus infusion a little more than usual, since the agave already has some liquid in it. |
Pages: 1 31 replies