Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Hot on HuffPost Food:

See More Stories
Tell us what you think for a chance at $1000!

"hibiscus" news and stories

LeNell It All - Jamaica

dried hibiscus jamaica flowers

Dried hibiscus flowers. Photo: empracht, Flickr.


Alabama-born LeNell Smothers defines herself first and foremost as a bartender, but she's been called many things -- most recently, the proprietress of LeNell's liquor store. She's owned her own whiskey label, called Red Hook Rye, and has been recognized by her home state as an honorary Colonel. Other interests include gin, sin and men.

My first truckload of household goods from the States arrived in Mexico this past week. As soon as the refrigerator powered on, we headed to the market for groceries. First stop was a stand labeled "Semillas," meaning "seeds," where we found nuts, spices and dried hibiscus known as "jamaica" heaped tall in metal tubs and baskets. Tired of the boring jamaica we've found in restaurants -- over diluted and often made with jamaica concentrate -- Demian and I were excited to make a big batch of deep ruby red, tart jamaica as one of the first things to put into Casa Cóctel's refrigerator.

Alberta Straub, aka Miss Flighty, is a bartender committed to organic, natural ingredients in her drink making. She introduced me to making cocktails with jamaica. Miss Flighty loves using it as a replacement for cranberry juice and has been quite the evangelist for jamaica's refreshing, inexpensive and kidney-cleansing benefits. Jamaica is one of Alberta's bar essentials and she proved to me how delicious and versatile it is. Now it's a bar essential for me, too.
Continue Reading

Filed under: Cocktail Hour, Drink Recipes

Dieu du Ciel's Rosée d'Hibiscus - Beer of the Week


rosee d'hibiscus
Photo: Joshua M. Bernstein.
Joshua M. Bernstein, Gourmet.com's beer columnist, has written about brews, bars and booze for New York Magazine, Time Out New York, ForbesTraveler.com and the New York Times.

It takes a strong man to wear pink. It takes an even stronger man to heft a frothy pint of pink beer, like the rare-burger-hued Rosée d'Hibiscus, from the genre-busting Canadian brewers at Dieu du Ciel! ("god of the sky").

Since 1998, these mad fermentationists have crafted head-scratching, tummy-pleasing beers like the Equinoxe du Printemps, a strong Scotch ale made with maple syrup, and the Clef des Champs, a floral rye ale flavored with heather and mugwort. Naturally, there was no way that Dieu du Ciel would make a conventional wheat beer.

One day, head brewer Jean-François Gravel was watching a TV documentary on western Africa, which included a discussion of bissap -- a tea made from an infusion of hibiscus flowers and sugar. Gravel re-created the drink at home, realizing the flower's floral profile and acidity would complement a tangy blanche (a wheat bear).
Continue Reading

Filed under: Drink Recipes

Sponsored Links

Sabai - Another New Hibiscus Drink

Looks like hibiscus is the thing for the summer. Here is another new product made, this time, from Thai Hibiscus.

Sabai (available for £4.99 for 4 275ml bottles) is a wine spritzer infused with the flower. This gives it its ruby red colour. According to the website this drink is so popular in Thailand that 90 million bottles are sold every year. The grapes used ot make the wine base are from floating vineyards in the Chao Phyra delta while the flowers are grown in the northern provinces.

Sabai will be available from Tesco and Sainsbury's shortly but you can buy online from the website for £28.80 for 24 bottles.

Source

Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes, New Products

New Drink: Hibiscus

Is this going to be the 'next big thing' as the press release would have us beleive? It is a Hibiscus drink made from pressed hibiscus flowers.

The drink is entirely natural and caffeine-free, with a colour of the original flowers - a gorgeous ruby red. Hibiscus is also known as Indian sorrel, Rosella or Florida cranberry and contains powerful anti-oxidants believed to have positive health benefits. It can be drunk cold (refreshing) or hot as an non-alcoholic alternative to red wine. While the manufacturers stress its versitility in various cocktails.

Available in the UK in delis and on line where 24 250ml bottles can be brought for £8.99 or 4 750ml botles for £6.99.

Source

Filed under: Health & Medical, New Products

Edible flowers at Trader Joe's

Whenever someone mentioned edible flowers to me, whether as part of a dish or used as a garnish, I nodded politely and did not think much of it. I considered edible flowers to be among the items that one can only find at a store with hard-to-find specialty ingredients - ingredients that I would probably never use, let alone actually need. This week, however, I spotted bags of hibiscus flowers at Trader Joe's.

Sold alongside the other dried fruits, the hibiscus flowers are dried and lightly sweetened. Apart from their beautiful dark fuchsiacolor, they taste pretty good. Slightly sweet and chewy, like fruit leather, they have a bit of a vegetal undertone that is not present in most dried fruits. I think that they'd make an attractive garnish for cakes and even a nice, unusual addition to a spring-time salad. They are not, however, something that I would eat by the handful.

[Photo by Nicole Weston]

Filed under: Food Oddities, Stores & Shopping, Ingredients, New Products

Most Popular Stories

  • FDA Still Struggling to Define

    FDA Still Struggling to Define "Gluten-Free"Read More

  • This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg Itself

    This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg ItselfRead More

  • Why Jewish Food Disappoints

    Why Jewish Food DisappointsRead More

Latest Flickr Feed


Sponsored Links