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Apricots [message #14228] Sat, 04 April 2009 19:20 Go to next message
jmeadows  is currently offline jmeadows
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Apricots


Smooshes!
Re: Apricots [message #14231 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 19:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
southdowner  is currently offline southdowner
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Looking for foods naturally containing vitamin D (a discussion from a previous blog post) I roamed the wholefoods counter today, and nearly brought home some apricots, but they were treated? with some sulphurous compound and I just wasn't sure if I was being unreasonable wanting apricots au nature? Smile

Apricots and ginger sound so yummy, I'm regretting those squidgy little fruit which I left on the shelf... but I have got a bar of Green & Blacks with ginger bits in... *scurries off to kitchen so fast that I leave spelling errors in my wake*

[Updated on: Sat, 04 April 2009 20:29]


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14238 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 20:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
GraceNotes  is currently offline GraceNotes
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This looks so yummy! I'd rather bake cookies though. Can any of you clever, natural cooks out there tell me how to do that? Just what is the difference between cake batter and cookie dough as far as ingredients and proportions go?
Thanks in advance!
Re: Apricots [message #14240 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 20:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
skating librarian  is currently offline skating librarian
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Our food co-op carries dried apricots, sulphered and un-sulphered, organic and conventionally grown, from Turkey and the US. That creates a real arrrgh moment.

The unsulphered ones are usually from Turkey, non-organic, and may have a larger carbon footprint.

Even if I plant an apricot tree this year, I'm still a couple of years away from fruit.

Thin apricots to a spacing of 5 to 7 cm. or your crop will suffer ... in April or May when they are the size of a gooseberry (obviously an English gardening book, the National Trust always suckers me in with deals on gardening books). Protect from birds. Do not pick until ripe ... late July or August. Does that help? I must admit that not thinning is something I am at last getting over, as my nectarines really suffer if I don't.

This year I may even thin the grapes!


"Winning a war is like winning an earthquake" Jeanette Rankin
Re: Apricots [message #14242 is a reply to message #14240 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 20:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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skating librarian wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 01:30

... when they are the size of a gooseberry (obviously an English gardening book, the National Trust always suckers me in with deals on gardening books)

Are there no gooseberries in the States? *ducks after showing such ignorance*


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14243 is a reply to message #14242 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 20:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
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They're extremely uncommon, some specialty grocers carry them. I've never tried one.


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: Apricots [message #14245 is a reply to message #14243 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 20:51 Go to previous messageGo to next message
southdowner  is currently offline southdowner
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Oh I love every hairy little morsel, they're a lovely combination of fruit sugar with tartness - why I like rhubarb if not too much sugar is added Smile


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14247 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 21:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Nurse Jane  is currently offline Nurse Jane
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What is orange essence? It is the orange version of vanilla extract?


When in trouble or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout.
Re: Apricots [message #14248 is a reply to message #14247 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 22:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cgbookcat1  is currently offline cgbookcat1
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Nurse Jane wrote on Sat, 04 April 2009 21:53

What is orange essence? It is the orange version of vanilla extract?


It sounds like it. I have some orange blossom water that I intend to substitute for the essence.

Thanks, Robin! I was looking for a good breakfast recipe, and anything containing both molasses and apricots has to be good.

[Updated on: Sun, 05 April 2009 13:19]

Re: Apricots [message #14250 is a reply to message #14242 ] Sat, 04 April 2009 22:34 Go to previous messageGo to next message
katinseattle  is currently offline katinseattle
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[quote title=southdowner wrote on Sat, 04 April 2009 17:40][quote
Are there no gooseberries in the States? *ducks after showing such ignorance*[/quote]

I have a gooseberry bush, which theoretically produces gooseberries. It hasn't.
Re: Apricots [message #14256 is a reply to message #14250 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 00:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
abigailmm  is currently offline abigailmm
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Gooseberries are in the currant family, of which several species grow in the US (I have collected them wild in botany class in California) but I don't think they are much cultivated here. Some species are the alternate host in the life cycle of a fungus that affects pines, so the forestry folks discourage them. Of course, the real solution to that is to not grow massive monoculture "forests," i.e. "farms" of pines, but modern agrubusiness doesn't tend to think that way.

The currants of this family are NOT the same as the little tiny raisins called currants, which are true raisins dried from grapes. Botanical common names – a source of fascinating research into history, folklore, ethnology, etc., but not reliable at all for talking about plants across cultural and geopraphical boundaries!

Abigail
Re: Apricots [message #14257 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 02:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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This looks very good, thanks Robin. I like the combination of orange with ginger and orange with apricots very much. I'd guess dried sour cherries would be good in this--I substitute them for raisins in molasses cookies with similar spices, and they work very nicely there.

If I had patio fruit trees they would be seriously unhappy right about now, because it's snowing and the wind is supposed to pick up overnight. "If winter comes, can spring be far behind?" asks the poet. Answer: YOU BET.

I was wondering why Betty Crocker and Fanny Farmer never tell you to adjust if your batter looks too runny/ too dry. And it’s probably because Betty and Fanny are expecting you to buy standard white flour at the standard white shop

Probably also because Fanny was one of the first, if not the first, to standardize measurements and recipes, and because they were writing for new cooks who'd want guaranteed results and wouldn't dream of experimenting with ingredients.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Apricots [message #14258 is a reply to message #14238 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 03:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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GraceNotes wrote on Sat, 04 April 2009 19:15

This looks so yummy! I'd rather bake cookies though. Can any of you clever, natural cooks out there tell me how to do that? Just what is the difference between cake batter and cookie dough as far as ingredients and proportions go?
Thanks in advance!


If you have a real batter (i.e., something more-or-less pourable), it's probably not worth trying to change it enough so that it could be baked as cookies. But recipes for bars that produce a fairly stiff dough can be baked as cookies--if the dough holds together when you scoop it out of the bowl, you can just try it as drop cookies and see how much it spreads. You might be interested in The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion, which has tons of recipes for cookies and bars and gives you some ideas about baking a bar recipe as cookies or a cookie recipe as bars.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Apricots [message #14259 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 04:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
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Oh so good! A recipe after all this time. And a spring-like recipe too! These would be fabulous with cinnamon ice cream. Or apricot granita... Sinful thoughts abound.

Do take days off Robin! And more recipes is a very easy way to do it (and we always are willing to eat more!).

That said, I hope your apricot tree bears fruit and you get to eat some of it (instead of feeding the local birds). I have a lovely little apricot tree, that flowers beautifully but has only borne one fruit in ten years Sad


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Apricots [message #14260 is a reply to message #14242 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 10:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melissa Mead  is currently offline Melissa Mead
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southdowner wrote on Sat, 04 April 2009 20:40

skating librarian wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 01:30

... when they are the size of a gooseberry (obviously an English gardening book, the National Trust always suckers me in with deals on gardening books)

Are there no gooseberries in the States? *ducks after showing such ignorance*


My parents used to have a bush in the back yard, but apparently growing gooseberries too near white pines kills one or the other...?


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Re: Apricots [message #14261 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 10:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melissa Mead  is currently offline Melissa Mead
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I must learn to finish the thread before posting.


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Re: Apricots [message #14272 is a reply to message #14259 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 14:51 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 10:56

Oh so good! A recipe after all this time. And a spring-like recipe too! These would be fabulous with cinnamon ice cream. Or apricot granita... Sinful thoughts abound.

Do take days off Robin! And more recipes is a very easy way to do it (and we always are willing to eat more!).

That said, I hope your apricot tree bears fruit and you get to eat some of it (instead of feeding the local birds). I have a lovely little apricot tree, that flowers beautifully but has only borne one fruit in ten years Sad



Cinnamon ice cream? Where? In Greece? I'm booking a flight!
Re: Apricots [message #14273 is a reply to message #14261 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 14:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Melissa Mead wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 15:53

I must learn to finish the thread before posting.

Enthusiasm Smile
It's probably why I have to edit many of my posts - that and my speed typing ("speed typing" ROFL!!)


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14274 is a reply to message #14259 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 14:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
southdowner  is currently offline southdowner
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Susan you horror - I'm just making resolutions to be good and eat well, and now this!
Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 09:56

These would be fabulous with cinnamon ice cream. Or apricot granita... Sinful thoughts abound.

Oh well, I could always eat the Green and Blacks which I put at the back of the cupboard for emergencies Razz


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14280 is a reply to message #14259 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 15:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 09:56

I have a lovely little apricot tree, that flowers beautifully but has only borne one fruit in ten years Sad


Have you tried giving it a high potash feed regularly during the spring, Susan? A handful of sulphate of potash, watered in, if you can find it. Otherwise, any liquid feed recommended for tomatoes would be good.


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Apricots [message #14289 is a reply to message #14231 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 17:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 11:41

Looking for foods naturally containing vitamin D (a discussion from a previous blog post) I roamed the wholefoods counter today, and nearly brought home some apricots, but they were treated? with some sulphurous compound and I just wasn't sure if I was being unreasonable wanting apricots au nature? Smile



No you are not being unreasonable Smile If you can find them, NZ dried apricots are not usually treated. The Sulphur compound makes them keep the bright orange colour - if you see dried apricots of a dark orange/brown colour they probably arent treated.

NZ apricots are dried much more than the turkish ones I have seen - those are moist and plump - ours are dry and leathery (and chewy and delicious) but will plump up if soaked in warm water for a while if thats your thing

http://www.21food.com/userImages/chidafang/chidafang$3101542 1.jpg

Those are not what NZ dried apricots look like. But YMMV as to your preference Smile
Re: Apricots [message #14294 is a reply to message #14289 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 18:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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BlueRose wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 22:30

If you can find them, NZ dried apricots are not usually treated. The Sulphur compound makes them keep the bright orange colour - if you see dried apricots of a dark orange/brown colour they probably arent treated.

NZ apricots are dried much more than the turkish ones I have seen - those are moist and plump - ours are dry and leathery (and chewy and delicious) but will plump up if soaked in warm water for a while if thats your thing

Thank you BlueRose, this does ring a bell - I vaguely remembered that dark apricots are the ones to look for, but these were a vivid orange, and made me think I should pass... but drat you Robin, I now want apricots and will have to go out apricot-tracking in the morning Smile


Someone says "pie" and we all go on alert, like meercats. "Pie? Where?" - Blackbear
Re: Apricots [message #14311 is a reply to message #14248 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 19:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Orange blossom water is much milder. Orange essence is STRONG. It's roughly speaking equivalent to vanilla, but GOOD vanilla--which over here anyway is often called vanilla essence. Orange oil is either the same thing or similar. You DON'T want 'orange flavouring'.
Re: Apricots [message #14312 is a reply to message #14257 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 19:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Diane in MN wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 02:55



I was wondering why Betty Crocker and Fanny Farmer never tell you to adjust if your batter looks too runny/ too dry. And it’s probably because Betty and Fanny are expecting you to buy standard white flour at the standard white shop

Probably also because Fanny was one of the first, if not the first, to standardize measurements and recipes, and because they were writing for new cooks who'd want guaranteed results and wouldn't dream of experimenting with ingredients.


But that's exactly my point: you won't get guaranteed results if you *aren't* using the personality-less grade nothing standard white flour. And the new cooks might buy organic unbleached white flour because they have a vague idea it's better for them--which it is--and then follow the recipe blindly and get a strange result.

(I wonder if new editions of Fanny or Betty--I assume there ARE new editions--talk about this at all?)

[Updated on: Sun, 05 April 2009 19:33]

Re: Apricots [message #14313 is a reply to message #14259 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 19:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Yes, I'm busy making . . . er . . . not-new-year's resolutions. Again.
Re: Apricots [message #14332 is a reply to message #14294 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 20:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 18:52

BlueRose wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 22:30

If you can find them, NZ dried apricots are not usually treated. The Sulphur compound makes them keep the bright orange colour - if you see dried apricots of a dark orange/brown colour they probably arent treated.

NZ apricots are dried much more than the turkish ones I have seen - those are moist and plump - ours are dry and leathery (and chewy and delicious) but will plump up if soaked in warm water for a while if thats your thing

Thank you BlueRose, this does ring a bell - I vaguely remembered that dark apricots are the ones to look for, but these were a vivid orange, and made me think I should pass... but drat you Robin, I now want apricots and will have to go out apricot-tracking in the morning Smile


The sulfur dioxide helps to preserve the orange colour for a while. It isn't "forever". If you buy a pack of treated apricots and put them, say, in the fridge, and forget them you will find that they will go "not orange". They aren't "off" just the sulfur has worn off. But it may take a year!!
And I'm with BlueRose - ours are leathery too and I much prefer the flavour. Smile And if you want to be extravagent then soak in them in apricot nectar... mmmmmmm I used to add them to porridge. Very Happy (They didn't need soaking then!!)


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Re: Apricots [message #14333 is a reply to message #14228 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 21:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melissa Mead  is currently offline Melissa Mead
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The sulfur can even be dangerous to some people.

http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/allerg/sulph e.shtml


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Re: Apricots [message #14334 is a reply to message #14333 ] Sun, 05 April 2009 21:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Melissa Mead wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 21:20

The sulfur can even be dangerous to some people.

http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/allerg/sulph e.shtml


My sister in law won't have them because she is allergic to preservatives. But even if she wasn't allergic to that she would still not be able to have them because they are too high in fructose for her.

But I don't have a problems with them..... mmmmm dried apricots ..... Very Happy


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: Apricots [message #14340 is a reply to message #14272 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 00:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Fake Frenchie wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 13:51


Cinnamon ice cream? Where? In Greece? I'm booking a flight!


If you get an ice cream maker--Cuisinart makes a nice one that produces a quart and a half at a time--you can make your own cinnamon ice cream, no sweat. That's what I do--but not too often because it's even easier to eat it. Smile



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Apricots [message #14341 is a reply to message #14340 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 00:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Diane in MN wrote on Mon, 06 April 2009 00:11

Fake Frenchie wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 13:51


Cinnamon ice cream? Where? In Greece? I'm booking a flight!


If you get an ice cream maker--Cuisinart makes a nice one that produces a quart and a half at a time--you can make your own cinnamon ice cream, no sweat. That's what I do--but not too often because it's even easier to eat it. Smile


I have one of their ice cream makers, but haven't experimented any further than thin mint ice cream (which I keep making over and over). Do you have a favorite cinnamon ice cream recipe?
Re: Apricots [message #14342 is a reply to message #14312 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 00:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Robin wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 18:28


(I wonder if new editions of Fanny or Betty--I assume there ARE new editions--talk about this at all?)


Fanny at least has gone through a few editions since I bought my first one forty-some years ago. And back then you would have had to hunt to find anything besides all-purpose or cake flour on a grocery shelf; if you were lucky, there'd be bread flour as well. Now that whole grain flour is widely praised and more readily available, I think it's lots more likely that these general-purpose books would have some discussion about their characteristics.



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Apricots [message #14343 is a reply to message #14341 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 00:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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cgbookcat1 wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 23:16


I have one of their ice cream makers, but haven't experimented any further than thin mint ice cream (which I keep making over and over). Do you have a favorite cinnamon ice cream recipe?


Here it is: 1 cup heavy cream, 2 cups half and half, 1/2 cup sugar, 2 TBSP cinnamon (or to taste). Put it in the machine and that's it. Smile

By the way, good going Spartans--I'll be rooting for them tomorrow night!

[Updated on: Mon, 06 April 2009 00:36]



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Apricots [message #14355 is a reply to message #14272 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 07:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
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Fake Frenchie wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 21:51

Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 10:56

Oh so good! A recipe after all this time. And a spring-like recipe too! These would be fabulous with cinnamon ice cream. Or apricot granita... Sinful thoughts abound.

Do take days off Robin! And more recipes is a very easy way to do it (and we always are willing to eat more!).

That said, I hope your apricot tree bears fruit and you get to eat some of it (instead of feeding the local birds). I have a lovely little apricot tree, that flowers beautifully but has only borne one fruit in ten years Sad



Cinnamon ice cream? Where? In Greece? I'm booking a flight!


Weeeeellllll, actually the first time I had cinnamon ice cream was in a little town called Rolle on the shores of Lac Leman (Lake Geneva) at an artisanal ice cream maker, back when those were quite rare some 25 years ago. I had a ball of cinnamon and a ball of apple and my, was it good. But here I actually meant to make my own like Diane said, though, probably with more milk and less cream. I find cream very hard to digest.


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Apricots [message #14356 is a reply to message #14311 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 07:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Robin wrote on Mon, 06 April 2009 00:25

Orange blossom water is much milder. Orange essence is STRONG. It's roughly speaking equivalent to vanilla, but GOOD vanilla--which over here anyway is often called vanilla essence. Orange oil is either the same thing or similar. You DON'T want 'orange flavouring'.

If you have trouble finding it, go to your local health food store or the kind of chemist (pharmacy) that sells essential oils.

Lakeland used to do it in lovely big bottles, but I think they've stopped selling it now. Sad


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Re: Apricots [message #14357 is a reply to message #14274 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 07:42 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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southdowner wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 21:58

Susan you horror - I'm just making resolutions to be good and eat well, and now this!
Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 09:56

These would be fabulous with cinnamon ice cream. Or apricot granita... Sinful thoughts abound.

Oh well, I could always eat the Green and Blacks which I put at the back of the cupboard for emergencies Razz


I am so easily carried away by other people's temptations, I feel only right in returning the favour. Anyway, apricot granita can be quite healthy if made at home (low fat) and you can always serve it with the biscuits and shavings of your Green and Blacks on top (I would use Valrhone single estate, but that's just me: Green and Blacks rarely does it for me, with the exception of the dark chocolate with ginger variety).


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Apricots [message #14358 is a reply to message #14311 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 07:45 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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Robin wrote on Mon, 06 April 2009 02:25

Orange blossom water is much milder. Orange essence is STRONG. It's roughly speaking equivalent to vanilla, but GOOD vanilla--which over here anyway is often called vanilla essence. Orange oil is either the same thing or similar. You DON'T want 'orange flavouring'.


What you can do, however, is add the orange water (which is a by-product of making orange essential oil and is thus saturated with that essence) and add it along with a nice amount of orange zest. In Greek cakes and biscuits we also add some vanilla when we add orange zest and that brings out both flavours in a very discreet yet aromatic way. (if you can't wait for essence to arrive or have a hard time finding it)


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Apricots [message #14359 is a reply to message #14280 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 07:46 Go to previous messageGo to next message
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AJLR wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 22:23

Susan from Athens wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 09:56

I have a lovely little apricot tree, that flowers beautifully but has only borne one fruit in ten years Sad


Have you tried giving it a high potash feed regularly during the spring, Susan? A handful of sulphate of potash, watered in, if you can find it. Otherwise, any liquid feed recommended for tomatoes would be good.

I think we've tried every kind of plant food there is! But thanks for the hint.


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Apricots [message #14361 is a reply to message #14359 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 08:22 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Yes, I thought you probably would have done, but this might be worth a try. Smile I suppose you do get enough bees for the pollination, six floors up?


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Apricots [message #14362 is a reply to message #14343 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 08:22 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cgbookcat1  is currently offline cgbookcat1
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Diane in MN wrote on Mon, 06 April 2009 00:35

cgbookcat1 wrote on Sun, 05 April 2009 23:16


I have one of their ice cream makers, but haven't experimented any further than thin mint ice cream (which I keep making over and over). Do you have a favorite cinnamon ice cream recipe?


Here it is: 1 cup heavy cream, 2 cups half and half, 1/2 cup sugar, 2 TBSP cinnamon (or to taste). Put it in the machine and that's it. Smile

By the way, good going Spartans--I'll be rooting for them tomorrow night!



Thanks, Diane!

Susan, I found the extract at the grocery last night, but I might add some orange zest anyway.
Re: Apricots [message #14369 is a reply to message #14361 ] Mon, 06 April 2009 13:24 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
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ajlr: Well, peculiarly enough, we do. We get bees and bumblebees (as well as wasps and mosquitoes).

cgcookbook glad you found what you needed!


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
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