Showing posts with label faux gin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faux gin. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Herbs for Summer Beverages: Teas, Shrubs & Mocktails

Cool off with refreshing, herb-infused drinks!



Summer heat calls for drinks that truly refresh. Why settle for boring store-bought options when you can craft your own beautiful, herb-infused beverages? From iced teas and tangy shrubs to sophisticated mocktails, herbs bring bright flavors and gentle wellness benefits to your summer sipping.

Iced Herbal Teas to Soothe and Refresh

  • Brew strong herbal tea with mint, lemon balm, hibiscus, or chamomile. Chill and serve over ice with fresh citrus slices. Check out our Summer Tea Blends.
  • Add a touch of honey or herbal simple syrup for gentle sweetness.
  • Tip: Try cold-infusing overnight in the fridge for mellow flavor.

  • Making Simple Syrup

o    1  cup sugar

o    1  cup water

o    1 cup loosely packed fresh herb leaves, savory or sweet you can use any herb or edible flower

Place sugar and water in a small pan over medium heat until sugar is fully dissolved, about 2 minutes. Add the herbs. Allow to steep until the liquid reaches room temperature (15-30 minutes) and strain and discard herbs. Place syrup in a glass container or squeeze bottle if you have it.  Cover and chill for a couple hours. Leftovers can be stored in the fridge for up to a month.  

Herbal Shrubs for Tart Complexity

  • Make a shrub (drinking vinegar) with herbs, fruit, sugar, and vinegar.
  • Basil-strawberry, rosemary-peach, or thyme-blueberry are classic summer combos.
  • Mix 1–2 tablespoons of shrub concentrate with sparkling water for a sophisticated non-alcoholic cocktail.

  • Roasted Raspberry-Thyme Shrub
    • 2 cups raspberries
    • 1 cup sugar
    • 8 thyme sprigs (or 2 tsp dried)
    • 1 cup apple cider vinegar

Place raspberries in a 9 x 13-inch baking dish and toss with sugar, 6 thyme sprigs. Cover and refrigerate for at least 8 hours or overnight, until raspberries release their juice.  Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.  Bring the pan to room temperature.  Roast the raspberries and their juice for about 25 minutes until the berries start to float.  Remove the pan from the oven and mash the berries lightly with a spoon.  Strain the juice through a fine mesh sieve over a measuring cup.  Pour vinegar over the berries in sieve and press to remove any last juice.  Pour liquid into a pint jar, add remaining thyme and cap with a plastic lid, shake and refrigerate 1 day to 1 week before using.  (Will keep up to 1 year in the refrigerator.)

TO USE: Combine 1 ounce of Shrub with 4 ounces of seltzer or sparkling water.

This recipe is from The Complete Guide to Pickling by Julie Laing (Rockridge Press:2020)

Elegant Mocktails with Garden-Fresh Flavor

  • Muddle fresh herbs (like basil, mint, or lavender) with citrus or berries.
  • Add simple syrup, club soda, or tonic for a refreshing fizz.
  • Example: Faux Gin and Tonic with your own herbal gin blend and tonic water garnished with cucumber and lemon.


Thyme without Gin Mocktail

  • Thyme Simple Syrup
  • fresh lemon juice
  • Substitute gin
  • Garnish: thyme sprigs

To make as a single cocktail – 1 part thyme simple syrup, 2 parts fresh lemon juice, 1 part zero proof Gin or regular gin, add to a large rocks glass with ice and about 3 ounces of sparkling water – part as ¾ ounce jigger makes a 6-ounce cocktail.

Closing

Summer herbs are more than just pretty—they’re the secret to memorable drinks that cool and delight. Experiment with your garden bounty and toast to a season of herbal refreshment!

Monday, October 9, 2023

Three Host and Hostess Gifts to Make Ahead

The Fall entertaining season is about to start and if you are traveling to someone else's for a party we would like to recommend a few hand-made gifts that you can create to take as a present for the hosts.


Three handmade, herb infused gifts to present to your hosts:

  1. Homemade Bitters
  2. Hand-blended Teas
  3. Flavor infused Mixers

Handmade Bitters

In my mocktail program I always say I am going to share this recipe for citrus bitters on my blog, but i never seem to do it, so for those who have been waiting, here is the recipe.  you need to plan ahead to make this as a gift, as it takes 6 to 8 weeks to cure properly, but one batch will give you may jars of bitters to use for gifting and yourself!

Bitters are a special ingredient in cocktails that lends a tang to a drink and are great in drinks based on gin or vodka.  Bitters are also a digestive aid and these two recipes made with citrus are high in anti-oxidants and can assist with keeping blood sugar levels, well level.

Citrus bitters

The bright flavor these lend to your ginger ale, seltzer, sparking water or spirits is amazing and unique; you may find you cannot live without it.

  • 1 750-ml bottle of plain (unflavored) vodka
  • 4 oranges, zest only from the entire orange
  • 2 lemons, zest only from entire lemon
  • 1 Tbls fennel seeds
  • 1 3-inch cinnamon stick
  • ½ tsp whole cloves
  • ½ tsp coriander seed

Zest the lemons and oranges, getting all the orange and yellow peel, but none of the white pith underneath.  Place the zest and the fennel, coriander and cloves in a 1-quart mason jar.  Seal tightly and shake, then place in a cool, dark area for 4 to 8 weeks shaking every other day.

Once infused, strain the bitters using a fine mesh strainer and transfer the liquid to 4-ounce amber dropper jars for long term storage at room temperature. Recipe makes 6 4-ounce jars. These never spoil!

TO USE: 

  • Bitters can be added to a tall glass of iced ginger ale, just a few drops will make a refreshing drink.
  • Swap them in for extracts in baked goods.
  • Toss them with popcorn.
  • Shake them into lemonade or juice.
  • Infuse honey and maple syrup.
  • Add them to poaching liquid for fruit.
Try this Cocktail--  Tea Time Tippler

  • 2 oz. Green or Herbal Tea
  • 1 oz Lavender Simple Syrup
  • 1 oz Ginger Beer
  • 1/2 oz Lemon Juice
  • 2 Dashes of  Bitters

Directions:

Combine ingredients in a shaker and shake. Strain into chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with grapefruit disk. Recipe makes 1 cocktail.

Hand-blended Teas

A dry herb tea blend is quick and easy to make. Then just place the mixture in a canning jar with a decorative label with instructions and attach a tea infuser and you have a perfect little gift. Choose a relaxing blend to help your host wind down after the stress of entertaining. This recipe has cooling and restoring mint along with immunity boosters in lemongrass and rosehips.



Winter Serendipitea Tea 

  • 1 teaspoon dried spearmint
  • 1 teaspoon peppermint
  • 1 teaspoon crushed rosehips
  • 1 teaspoon dried chopped lemongrass 
  • 1/2 teaspoon each of orange peel 
  • 1/2 teaspoon raspberry leaf
  • dash of cinnamon

Mix ingredients together well.  Store in a tightly lidded container.

TO USE: Bring cool water to a boil.  Place 1 tsp of the tea blend in a tea infuser, pour 1 cup of boiling water over and allow to steep for 3 – 5 minutes, preferably in a covered container.  

For iced tea, allow to steep up to 10 minutes, then allow to cool to room temperature and add ice and a squeeze of lemon if desired.

We have shared a number of recipes for herb teas here in the blog, so if you want something different check out this list: Tea Recipes at Backyard Patch

Or you can just pick up a Backyard Patch Tea blend by visiting our website.

Flavor-infused Mixers

My last recommendation is to make a flavored alcohol or a faux gin for your hosts. We have recipes here: Faux Gin. Or you can craft something with our simple cocktail kits, like Apple Cinnamon Bourbon or a quick and easy Faux Gin, or even an Old-Fashioned Cocktail.



To make your own Old-Fashioned --

  • 2 ounces bourbon or rye whiskey 
  • 1/4 ounce simple syrup 
  • 2 dashes bitters 
  •  orange slice & maraschino cherry to garnish
Combine all ingredients in a low ball glass, add ice and garnish and sip!

Monday, March 4, 2019

Mocktails Need Special Ingredients -- Making a Faux Gin

One of my very popular programs currently is Mocktails.  A wonderful program exploring the flavors of herbs that make excellent cocktail flavors and ingredients.  We explore herb infused simple syrups, herb infused teas and juices and traditional cocktail techniques, like muddling to create unique herb flavors for fun entertaining.  Although the program is alcohol-free all the techniques can be used to make true cocktails as well.  If you are interested in attending a Mocktail Program there are several coming up soon.  Check our the program page of the blog for an up to date list:  Scheduled Programs.


Infused Gin Substitute; Juice Gin Substitute; and Lavender Infused Grape juice

In order to make a Mocktail, you must create alcohol substitutes.  Some alcohols can be easily substituted, like water for vodka or grape juice for wine and sparkling water or ginger ale for champagne.  One of those substitutes is a alternative to Gin.  Gin cannot be easily substituted with a simple beverage.  Juniper is a special flavor in Gin along with other herbs so to create a different version of this you must infuse, or steep, the flavor of juniper into other media.

One technique uses fresh fruit, both the juice and peel combined with juniper berries and other spices to create a flavored beverage you can use in numerous Gin themed drinks.

In the photo above the center jar contains a Juice Gin Substitute made with oranges, blood oranges, lemons and grapefruit infused with rosemary, juniper, cardamom and citrus peel to create a subtly bitter infusion that is very similar to real Gin.

Gin Substitute Juice

To create a non-alcoholic gin and tonic you need to craft a complex flavored juice to use to craft the cocktail and you need some citrus or floral bitters to substitute for the bitterness of the quinine you find in the tonic water.


For the juice infusion

  • 3 large grapefruits (pink or regular or both)
  • 1 lemon
  • 3 oranges (blood orange and regular)
  • 8 juniper berries
  • 6 cardamom pods
  • 1 sprig rosemary
Other
  • Sparkling water or soda water
  • ice cubes
  • Citrus or Floral Bitters


Instructions

  1. Peel off some rind off the grapefruit, lemon and orange. You want about 3 5-inch long peels, one or two of each fruit to add to the bottle.
  2. Cut the fruit in half and juice into a bowl, don't worry about the fruit flesh falling in.
  3. From the bowl, strain the juice through a sieve to catch the meat.
  4. Add the juniper berries, cardamom pods and rosemary sprig to a bottle or other vessel with a lid. Add a peel of each citrus fruit and then pour in the strained juices. Shake well.
  5. Infuse overnight or for a couple of days or use right away.
  6. To create Mocktail: Combine equal amounts of faux gin - juice infusion and sparkling water over ice and add a dash or two of bitters.







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