Passionfruit and Lemon Curd

Sunny, sweet, and tart. Best when the outside of the passionfruit is wrinkly and it feels heavy in the hand.

What do you do when the sun is out, but it’s frigid, with temperatures dropping and snow on the way? And you just need a little tart sweetness in your life?

You make passionfruit and lemon curd.

Floral. Sharp. Delicious.

Put it on a biscuit. Swirl it into yogurt. Eat it from the jar. Your choice.

Passionfruit and Lemon Curd
2 passionfruits
2 lemons (juice and zest)
3/4 cup sugar
2 eggs, beaten
5 tablespoons salted butter

Method
In a medium-sized bowl, combine the guts of the passionfruit, lemon juice and zest, and sugar. Strain your beaten eggs through a mesh strainer to remove any stringy bits and add to the bowl. You could also strain the passion fruit guts if you like to remove the seeds, but the little crunch is nice so I leave them in. Whisk these ingredients together and set the bowl aside.

Melt the butter in a large sauce pan over low heat. Whisking constantly, add the egg and juice mixture to the saucepan.

Now is the fun part. Stand over the stove, whisking vigorously, for approximately 10 minutes until the mixture thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon. If you do not keep the mixture moving, you will end up with lemon-scented scrambled eggs. So put on a podcast, and settle in.

If your mixture does scramble slightly, you can always press it through a strainer after it’s thick. This will remove those passionfruit seeds, but that’s OK.

Refrigerate curd. It will thicken as it cools and become absolutely perfect. Best to eat this within a week, but you can also freeze it in ice cube trays and for use in smoothies or even as a swirl in homemade ice cream.

NOTE:
You can make this curd with any citrus fruit. You may need to adjust the sugar depending on how tart the citrus is, but you’ll need between 3/4 and 1 cup of liquid for this recipe if using another citrus fruit.

Herbal Remedies For The Win: Cough Drop Edition

Happiness is a mouthful of homemade cough drops. Trust me.

Ok, so Covid is a thing that pretty much everyone has these days, present company included. In the early days, fever and achy pains kept me mostly horizontal, and herbal remedies in the form of tinctures were easiest to relieve Covid symptoms. But then I decided to give making my own cough drops a try, both for a little sugar and just to see what happens.

Spoiler alert: they aren’t easy, but I will absolutely make them again. They can be customized with herbal tinctures to treat the symptoms you are experiencing, and the herb blend I used – bee balm, lemon balm, and blue spruce – relieved my Covid symptoms naturally.

Herbal Cough Drops

Ingredients

1 cup sugar (see Recipe Notes)

½ cup honey

½ cup herbal tea (I used peppermint that I grew, brewed strong)

½ to ¾ teaspoon peppermint or lemon extract

1 to 2 droppers of herbal tincture (see Recipe Notes)

You’ll need: powdered sugar (or candy molds) and a candy thermometer

Method

You don’t need candy molds to make these. Place several inches of powder sugar into a 9” x 13” glass pan and use your fingertip to create indentations. These will hold the melted sugar mixture.

Place sugar, honey, and tea in a heavy, high-sided saucepan and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Over medium to medium-high heat, continue to cook until the sugar reaches 300 degrees. This can take 15 to 25 minutes, but keep an eye on it. Overflowed sugar is catastrophically messy, and burnt sugar is terrible.

Once your sugar has reached the temperature, stir in the extract and herbal tinctures of your choice, then transfer the mixture to a Pyrex measuring cup for easy pouring.

Pour sugar into the powdered sugar dents (or candy molds if using) and allow it to cool. Toss cough drops in powdered sugar and store them in an airtight container.

Sift the powdered sugar to remove stray candy bits and feel free to re-use.

Recipe Notes

*Honey can be a difficult flavor, and it burns easily. You can replace some or all of the honey with sugar, or you can use all honey. Just keep an eye on the mixture as it cooks — if it doesn’t reach 300 degrees before scorching, the cough drops will still be great (if a little chewy).

*Good herbal tinctures to use for cold and flu relief are:

  • Lemon balm
  • Bee balm
  • Mullein
  • Blue spruce
  • Yarrow
  • Nettle
  • Mint
  • Elderberry
  • Echinacea

Snow Day: Lemon, Ginger, And Walnut Scones

Two scones sit on a white plate in front of a snowy background
Snowy bokeh for snow day scones.

You wake up to a wintery landscape, snow blowing in delicate flakes, adding to the two inches that has already fallen on the railings of your balcony and weighed down your plant’s new leaves that last week’s 65-degree temperatures coaxed unseasonably into life.

Scones. That’s the thing for today. It’s too blustery for walking, and there is no need to go anywhere, so you pile up books and paper and pens and lists of movies (or whatever you really like when you’re hunkering down), and you throw together scones, ready in 30 minutes (but better after cooling if you can wait that long).

When you realize you don’t have an egg, you don’t panic. You substitute a tablespoon of vegetable oil, a tablespoon of water, and a few splashes of cream. And it all turns out just fine.

Lemon, Ginger, and Walnut Scones

Ingredients

2 cups gluten-free all-purpose flour (or regular AP flour, but don’t knead too much)

1/3 cup sugar

1 ½ tsp. baking powder

½ tsp. salt

½ tsp. baking soda

8 T. butter, frozen and grated

½ cup sour cream or yogurt

1 egg, beaten

1/4 cup each chopped walnuts and chopped crystallized ginger

Zest of one lemon

Turbinado sugar for topping

Method:

Make sure your butter is frozen before you start.

Preheat oven to 400⁰.

In a medium bowl (big enough to get your hands in) mix together dry ingredients. Grate butter into dry ingredients, and quickly rub flour into butter until the mixture resembles cornmeal (this can also be done in a food processor).  Add chopped walnuts and ginger and stir to combine.

If you are using sour cream, mix egg and sour cream together in a small bowl. Stir this mixture into the dry ingredients, pressing and stirring the sticky dough until it comes together.

On a lightly floured surface, shape the dough into a circle that is approximately 8” across. Cut into eight triangles and place on a parchment-lined baking sheet about one inch apart. If you want smaller scones, you can also cut the triangles in half.

Sprinkle each scone with turbinado sugar.

Bake scones for 15-18 minutes or until they are golden brown. Let cool slightly before serving.