Search This Blog

Pages

Showing posts with label lemon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lemon. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

Lemon Granita (with a special winter twist)

I recently made lemon granita with some friends on our "Homemade Italian Pizza" night. Granita is a fruit ice that originated in southern Italy. We made ours with the meyer lemons from my tree.

While I was up at Lake Tahoe for
spring break, I had a lot of lemons I needed to process. I used the rinds for making limoncello (an Italian lemon liqueur), and that meant I had lots of juice to use.

It's very simple. Here's how you do it.

Combine 1 and 1/4 cups sugar with 2 cups water in a medium sauce pan. Stir until the sugar dissolves and the mixture comes to a boil. Boil the s
ugar water for 5 minutes. Add 1 cup lemon juice and 1 T. grated lemon zest. Return to a boil and boil for 3 more minutes. Remove from the heat and cool completely. This can be stored in the fridge for a day or two until you're ready to freeze it.

Put a metal pan in the freezer to chill for at least 10 minutes. Pour in the cooled syrup and place the pan back in the freezer. After 2 hours, scrape the partially frozen mixture with a fork to break up the crystals. Put the mixture back in the freezer for 2 more hours (or more). Mix with a fork until slushy. Serve with mint garnish.

The rest of the story
While I was up at Tahoe, the mixture hadn't completely frozen by the time we were ready for dessert. We ate a spoonful, which was a little too syrupy, and realized that we had
the perfect ingredient sitting just outside our door. I scooped up a small bowlful of freshly fallen snow, spooned the partially frozen granita syrup over the top, mixed it in, and voila! It was perfect. It was like a lemon snow cone or slushy - very flavorful and exactly the right texture!

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Cucumber Salad with Lemon and Dill

Since I have been getting cucumbers from both the farm and from my garden, I have been eating this salad all summer. It is simple to prepare and very addictive.

Peel as many cucumbers as you think you'll eat at one sitting. Discard the peels. Using your peeler, keep peeling long strips of cucumber into a bowl. Discard the seeds in the middle when you get to them. (Or just eat them.) Sprinkle the long strips with a little salt, squeeze a little lemon on top, and add some chopped dill. Fresh dill is best, but dried tastes great, too.

This is cheap, summery, and fresh.

Cost to prepare:
2 cucumbers - $1 (I'm guessing)
1 lemon - $.40
1 T. dill - $.20
Total $1.60