Showing posts with label Drinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drinks. Show all posts

Friday, December 04, 2015

Dancing violinist and other weekend links...


Have you ever watched a dancing violinist?  It looks like quite a feat to me.  This little lady looks like a music fairy dancing and playing her violin with spunk and joy!  Her name?  Lindsey Stirling.
She played in the CMA Christmas Special.  Wonderful!


While I was shopping in my favorite health food store, Good Earth, I stumbled upon a brand new tea blend by Rishi.  It's called Chocolate Chai.  I couldn't resist buying a little bag of loose tea to try and I think it's really good!  I like a strong tea, so I prefer to make it like chai and allow the tea to simmer about 15-20 minutes and then add a little milk and honey.  The ingredients include:  black tea, coconut flakes,  cinnamon,  cocoa shells, sarsaparilla root, licorice root, cocoa nibs, roasted dandelion root, cloves, natural chocolate flavor.

I've also been making my own version of chai tea.  I mix Yorkshire Gold tea (my all-time fav) with cinnamon stick, fresh ginger root, a star anise, nutmeg, and a grind of black pepper.  Throw all spices in a tea bag like this, crush it with the side of a knife, and throw it, along with the tea bags, into a pot of boiling water.  Simmer with the tea bag(s) 15-20 minutes and add honey and milk at the end.  It satisfies a sweet tooth without too much sweet.

Next on my list of drinks to try is a Dirty Chai Latte.  It's a blend of chai tea, strong coffee, hot milk, a dash of cinnamon and a little sweetener.  Here's a homemade recipe.

Have you ever cut your own hair?  I have.  Lots.  The hairdressers say you shouldn't, but I do anyway.  A year so ago, I found this video by a young lady who cuts her own curly hair.   Since I'm a curly head too,  I took her advice and haven't been to the salon since.  I'm cutting my hair tonight!


Look at this!  A blue poinsettia?  I bought one at Stuff-Mart yesterday upon my husband's insistence.  He thought I should loosen up a little bit this holiday season.  Bah!   So I bought a red one for me and a blue one for him.  I put the red on the mantel and the blue on the dining table.  It's kinda pretty with its glitter and all.  They say it's a special dye that is sprayed on the white poinsettias and the glitter is added while the dye is still wet.  When the afternoon sun comes through my big window, I move the beauties to the floor to catch as much sun as possible.

I hope you're all making merry!  And feeling loose!

Thursday, May 08, 2014

20,000 Secrets of Tea (and more)

Hello Friends!
It's beginning to turn very spring-esque here on the prairie, but we are staying so cool and wet that the grass and flowers are slow coming.  The landscape is turning emerald green here which is a very welcomed sight after a white winter.  The colors of our prairie are most often white and brown, so green -- especially greengrass green -- is very lovely to see.

I've had many thoughts running around in my mind that I could make a blogpost about and so I'll start with one, Herb Teas, and see how far I get with the other thoughts churning in my head.  First off, I started out this winter learning about various essential oils which are made from herbs and leaves and bark and fruits and things.  I like essential oils very much, and they have led me to learning more about drinking natural healing herbs by way of making them into tea.  I'm a long way off from knowing a lot about herbs and their effective ways, but I'm learning.  I bought myself a book called 20,000 Secrets of Tea by Victoria Zak.  I've been bouncing my way through it, leaning back here and skipping up there.  The contents look like this:
The Wonders of Tea
The history of herbal teas from the discovery of the first tea to their popularity on a global scale.
Sympathetic Recipes
Down-to-earth methods of adding herbal treatments to your daily menu, with step-by-step instructions for using herbs as teas.
The Bounty of Blends
A simple formula to help you make your own inspirational blends of herbal teas at home as well as fabulous recipes for bountiful blends, with guidelines to evaluate commercial blends.
Teas and Specialties
A cornucopia of special uses for teas:  teas to cut your sugar consumption, teas for slimming, healing waters for botanical baths, and suggestions for setting up a modern medicinal kitchen with herbal teas.
Herbal Guide to Health
An A-Z guide to common health problems and health-oriented issues, followed by the herbal teas that are best used to treat them.
A Modern Herbal Tea Garden
More than 100 herbs are treated individually, with their official names, descriptions of the plants, stories and lore, uses in history, studies that reveal their unique nature, cautions to consider, properties and values, and proper parts to use.

So far, I'm trying to get a solid grasp on some basic teas that I want to try and how best to blend them to taste acceptable to me.  First off, I'm truly a coffee drinker at heart, but I have drunk a few teas that I liked.  I never have liked green tea (the tea bag varieties) so I wondered if there would be any of these herbal teas that I would drink with joy.  So far I have decided that I like peppermint tea along with the other herbs.  The peppermint gives that zing and energy that can cover some greener flavors that are not as appealing.  I'm also finding that I like these herbal teas best over ice.  For best results, the author suggests you steep herbs 5-10 minutes.  I do that, and then leave the tea ball in my drink even if I'm drinking it chilled so the tea can continue to infuse its health benefits long after the steep time.

I was surprised to learn how many vitamins and minerals one can get from a cup of herbal tea.  Let's take peppermint tea for an example.  Here are its beneficial properties:  Volatile oil of peppermint, good source of vitamins A and B-complex, C; carotenoids, betaine, choline, flavonoids, minerals, phytol, tocpherols, azulenes, rosmarinic acid, tannin.   It's values are:  Stimulant, antispasmodic, stomachic, diaphoretic, antiemetic,nervine, antiseptic, analgesic, astringent, decongestant, tonic, bitter.  What I like about this tea is that it is a stress-relieving tea that doesn't make you sleepy because of the menthol zing.  It's also great to calm an upset tummy.

Another couple of teas I'm trying are stinging nettle (sounds like something in a witches brew) and raspberry.  I like them just ok by themselves, but I sometimes mix them with my favorite black tea (Yorkshire Gold) or with peppermint tea.  Stinging nettle is said to stimulate the circulatory system, build energy and is an antiseptic which fights infections and respiratory weakness.  It also has serotonin for healthy brain function and regulate moods.  Check out the vitamins and minerals!  It includes vitamins A, C, D, and K; choline, lecithin, silica, iron (red blood builder).    Red raspberry leaf tea is said to help in womanly issues or lower body organs,  relieves difficulties including pelvic muscles and and uterine disorders and also strengthens kidneys and urinary tract.  It is also known to help with canker sores, bleeding gums, and extreme diarrhea.  Nutritional values:  vitamins A, B-complex, C, E;  citric and malic acids, calcium, niacin, iron, magnesium, pectin, potassium, selenium, silicon, sodium, zinc.
(Grape hiacinth coming up in my garden for a little splash of spring!)

I thought I'd try alfalfa tea since we grow our own alfalfa for hay for our livestock, and I must say, I like it!  It's refreshing iced.  The legume plant was first discovered by the Arabians.  When they saw that alfalfa made their horses swift and strong, the Arabians began to take alfalfa themselves.  The herb became known as The Father of All Foods.  The book suggested Alfalfa-Mint Tea which is a super brew used for energy and staying power.  The peppermint brings flavor and synergy to the tea.  It is recommended to use one tea bag of alfalfa and one tea bag of peppermint, steeping them together and pouring the blend in a tall glass with ice.  I do have some peppermint tea bags, but I pulled some leaves off our good alfalfa hay and put it in a tea ball when I made my tea.  Just for good measure, I rinsed off the leaves under cool water first before I steeped it.  Nutritional values:  vitamins A, E, K, B, D; phosphorus, iron, potassium, chlorine, sodium, silicon, magnesium, and beta carotene along with eight essential amino acids.

Many of the teas can also be used topically in baths or directly on the skin for soothing or deodorizing.  Peppermint, for example, can take on tough or lingering cases of body odor by taking it internally and adding peppermint tea bags bath water for an herbal bath.  Plantain (the weed most of us have in our lawns or in road ditches) is a great healing plant.  The leaves can be laid right on skin abrasions, wounds, or burns and bring relief.  A plantain bath stops itching and prevents the spread of poison ivy.  It dries and heals.  When you're not feeling well, with colds, flu, mucous infections and inflammations, plantain tea is a good one for you.  I have this pesky, healing plantain herb growing just behind my backyard.  I've infused it into oils for my healing ointments.

As you can see, there is a whole lot about herb teas that I could write, and I've only just touched the surface.  20,000 Secrets of Tea will be one of those resources that I will have handy, within reach, so that I can refer to it often for health and for treating ills.  I love the size of this little book,  4x7",  which makes it easy to carry in a purse or to slide in the tea/coffee cupboard for quick reference.

One more thing I want to share with you.  You can go to your grocery store and find some of these herb teas, but do check the ingredient labels.  Many are just flavored with oils and do not use the actual herbs.  I have also noticed that many herbal teas are blends, which are nice too, but if you want to try just one herb or two, the blends have too many herbs to get a good dose of a single herb or two.  I went to my health food store and found individual herbs bundled in smallish amounts, and they were a very inexpensive way to try out herb teas.  They were not sold as "tea" but just as the crushed, dried herbs.  I bought the nettle and red raspberry leaf  herbs for just $1.25 each.  The comparison to 16 tea bags of a blended Yogi tea, for instance, was about $5.  I'll probably get several more than 16 teaspoons (1 tsp. is a tea bag amount) out of my little buck twenty-five herbs.  That's quite a savings.  I also plan to collect and harvest some of the herbs we grow naturally around the ranch this summer and fall.  Rosehips, for instance, grow wild and are very nutritious and delicious in teas.

Do you drink herb teas?  If so, what kinds do you like, and how do you use herbal teas for your health?

Thursday, July 12, 2012

It's Tea O'Clock...


Seven years ago my daughter and I went on a 12 day trip to England to see what we could see, and we saw All That We Could See in that amount of time, including my British friend, A. who took us out romping in the Midlands and showed us great hospitality.  It was at her home that I first saw an electric kettle, an essential now in my own home. Oh what a time we had together!  Today A. mentioned that she was having a cream tea in my honor and since my daughter, G. gave me this dotty Stoke-on-Trent mug, made in the year of the Queen's Jubilee, I decided to have my own cream tea this afternoon.

Cream tea does not mean "pouring cream in tea," but instead it means having scones (what we call biscuits in rancher talk) and plopping them with whipped cream and jam.  This is a real treat!  I used my own strawberry jam on these.   Hubs enjoyed it too although he did not take any tea with his biscuit.

I enjoyed re-reading some lovely cards.

Then I decided to take a turn around the garden.

I love moss roses and they are thriving in the heat of the sun...

...and lilies and hollyhocks are holding on.

Mrs. Robin and her fledglings were out and about the yard.
It's another hot afternoon, but still, taking a cream tea was very refreshing to the soul.

If you are cold, tea will warm you.  If you are too heated, it will cool you.  If you are depressed, it will cheer you.  If you are excited, it will calm you. 
 ~Gladstone, 1865

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Blue snow cone...

 We all went to the park today to listen to Cousin L. sing in the regional  Texaco Country Showdown singing contest.  It was a good time sitting in the shade on lawn chairs and on blankets, sipping cold water and ice cold pop and eating snow cones.  Miss Bee had her first snow cone, and Papa decided it should be blue.  You know, Blue Lips!  Every mama wants to see her child with blue snow cone stains on her lips, teeth, neck and shirt, right?  It was another hot, hot day, typical for the 4th of July festivities.

Cousin L. WON the competition today and will go on to the Dakotas' state finals in a couple of weeks.  He's a young kid, just graduated high school with big singing dreams.  He loves the old-time classic country,  and  he sings it really well.  This afternoon he sang a Marty Robbins song, Don't Worry and Johnny Cash's classic, Folsom Prison Blues.  The crowd loved it.  Cousin L. will be singing the National Anthem every night of the Round-up Rodeo too!  We wish him all the best!

Here's to hot, summer days, 4th of July,country music, buckin' broncs, and blue lips!
Happy Birthday America!

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Summer afternoon iced coffee...



It's very simple.
Grab an icy mug from the freezer.
Fill it with ice cubes.
Pour the cold morning's coffee over the ice.
Next, pour a little half 'n' half in with it.
Stir and sip.

"... some like it hot, some like it cold..."
~Old Nursery Rhyme

Friday, September 28, 2007

Autumnal Toast



It's time to taste the Cherry Brandy!
Here's a toast.......to Autumn.

The morns are meeker than they were,
The nuts are getting brown;
The berry's cheek is plumper,
The rose is out of town.
The maple wears a gayer scarf,
The field a scarlet gown.
Lest I should be old-fashioned,
I'll put a trinket on.

~Emily Dickinson
________________________________________
Here's the recipe for the cherry brandy
that Isabella in the 21st Century
kindly shared with her readers back in July --
Cherry Picking Time.
This recipe is in her own words. It's best this way.
If you're out there "Isabella," thank you,
and please know how much you are missed.
My grandparents used to make something similar to this,
but they called theirs "Boozy Fruit."
They used combinations
of fruit in their concoction. The jar
was left on the counter and the
multi-colored fruits were very pretty to see.
The fruit was wonderful over ice cream --
so the adults said.
______________________________________________
Cherry Brandy
By: Isabella in the 21st Century (Natalie)

This would be a useful addition to any lady's
medicine cabinet so I thought I'd share the recipe.

You Will Need:
Enough good (washed) cherries to fill a jar,
2 oz sugar to every lb. of cherries.
Brandy to cover...supermarket brand,
not really good stuff or bath tub hooch.
A largish jar, well cleaned.

Method:
Prick your cherries and put them into the jar. Sprinkle sugar over them and cover with brandy, you want to completely cover them! Put the lid on the jar and fancy it up a little (cherry brandy deserves fancy) do not open for at least 2 months, you want the brandy to taste like cherries and the cherries to taste like brandy. Remember not to faint until the brandy is ready! There are culinary uses for cherry brandy, or so I'm told. I imagine they would be Black Forest Gateaux (who buys kirsch??) and trifle. Cherry brandy makes a nice gift...to people with nervous dispositions who often need reviving of course!

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