skip to main | skip to sidebar

Breugal

Food lore for people and, for spam bots, fake email addresses

Saturday, 20 December 2008

steep@macerations.ca

Dover reprint of M. Grieve Culinary Herbs and Condiments has a chapter devoted to herb liqueurs. The basic principle is simple. Although the method is not described in general terms it consists of the following: herb allowed to stand in sugar and grain alcohol anywhere from a number of days to months. The result is strained and delectable.
Posted by François Lachance at 17:59

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)
My photo
View my complete profile

Also on the WWW ... a commonplace book

Berneval

Blog Archive

  • ►  2009 (32)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (31)
  • ▼  2008 (61)
    • ▼  December (31)
      • quantity.servings@mennonite.cooking.ca
      • vegetables@combo.ca
      • soy@scrapple.ca
      • spinach@sesame.seeds.ca
      • salade@marguerite.ca
      • soup@serving.suggestions.ca
      • yeast@methods.ca
      • italian@potato.pie.ca
      • apple@savoury.bake.ca
      • eggplant.red.pepper@terrine.ca
      • lentils@chestnuts.ca
      • steep@macerations.ca
      • corn@contents.ca
      • milk.toast@child.recipes.ca
      • chamomile@cauliflower.ca
      • nut@soups.ca
      • bulgar.gorgonzola@artichokes.ca
      • persillade@parsley.shallots.ca
      • paradigm@measures.ca
      • new@word.ca
      • milanese@style.ca
      • tumeric@potatoes.ca
      • celery.seed@dressing.ca
      • crepes@muffin.tins.ca
      • wheat.berries@thermos.ca
      • cookies@galore.ca
      • food.work.@comment.ca
      • soubise@bechamel.ca
      • yogurt@cheese.ca
      • frozen.egg@hard.boiled.ca
      • soba@slurp.ca
    • ►  November (30)