Guest guest Posted August 14, 2008 Report Share Posted August 14, 2008 I got a tiny bottle of dill weed EO in Albany, Oregon in '79. Boy, did I quickly learn that more than one drop would ruin a batch of spanikopita filling, which consisted of 3 lbs of ricotta, a pound of spinach, three eggs and a half pound each of mozzarella and parmasean cheeses. I learned to just dip the tip of a toothpick in the bottle and swirl it through the stuffing, and wait one minute - the entire batch was permeated with the scent/taste of fresh dill weed. When I don't have fresh cilantro on hand, out comes the toothpick. Out of the bottle, the cilantro EO doesn't smell like cilantro, but as we learn, dilution is key. It's yummy. Mandy Aftel pioneered using jasmine grandi absolute in chocolate ganache. I add aromatics to practically everything I cook! I spritz a bit of orange blossom hydrosol or rose hydrosol in a glass of iced tea. The possibilities are endless. Want osmanthus icing for the cake? Well, what's holding you back? Anybody else perfume their food - naturally? ;-) -- Anya Anya's Garden http://AnyasGarden.com - perfumes, aromatics, classes, consultation Natural Perfumers Guild + blog with daily updates http://NaturalPerfumersGuild.blogspot.com 1500+ member Natural Perfumery group - http://health./group// Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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