• 3/22 Nat'l Water Day - 3

    From Dave Drum@1:18/200 to All on Sun Mar 20 18:09:45 2022
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Homemade Tonic Water
    Categories: Beverages, Herbs, Citrus
    Yield: 2 Cups

    1/8 c Powdered chinchona bark
    Zest & juice of one orange
    Zest & juice of one lemon
    Zest & juice of one lime
    1/2 ts Allspice berries
    1/2 ts Cardamom pods
    2 c Water
    pn Salt
    1 1/2 c Agave syrup
    Seltzer water

    Put the water in a pot on high heat. Add all of fruit and
    herbs.

    When it comes to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and let it cook
    for about 20 minutes.

    Let it cool. Strain it through a paper coffee filter. (This
    takes a long time, but if you don't use the paper filter, a
    lot of the chinchona powder will stay in, and you don't want
    to get a mouthful of it; it's incredibly bitter.)

    Add water to bring the volume back up to two cups.

    You've now got the basic concentrate for tonic water. You
    can either mix the agave in now, or you can do it when you
    make a glass of tonic. It's less work to just add the syrup
    now, but the concentrate will keep longer if you don't. I
    don't mix them.

    To make the tonic, mix together two tablespoons of
    concentrate (more if you like it extra bitter), and about 1
    1/2 tablespoons of agave syrup. Then add one cup of seltzer
    water.

    You can use a basic sugar syrup instead of the agave; the
    standard bar mix simple syrup substitutes with roughly the
    same quantity. But I think that the agave is better. Agave
    has a slighly different mouthfeel than cane sugar, and I
    think that it sweetens and smooths out the tonic without
    cutting too much of the bitterness. Cane sugar to me either
    doesn't taste sweet enough, or kills the edge of the tonic.

    To make a killer rum&tonic, take a nice light rum or cachaca
    (Cachaca is a brazilian liquor made from sugar cane juice,
    rather than from molasses; it tastes like a mild rum with a
    bit of grassiness), and mix it, 1 part rum to 3 parts tonic,
    and serve over ice.

    The one problem with this recipe is that Chinchona bark is
    kind of hard to find. The most common source of it is flaky
    herbal medicine stores. But some of the really large online
    spice shops have it. I bought a bunch from a place called
    "Tenzing Momo". They definitely qualify as "flaky herbal
    medicine store", but they also carry a really good selection
    of cooking herbs and spices. Chinchona is sold by the ounce;
    one ounce is about 1/4 cup.

    Posted by: Mark C. Chu-Carroll

    From: http://scienceblogs.com

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    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200)