There is something about a crimson coloured drink that makes it desirable and irresistible.
H thought they looked weird, and winced when I offered him the cordial. I looked at him as adamantly as I was allowed to and, to my surprise, he relented and took a sip. Then he waved the half full glass of roselle out of my reach. I smacked his arm with my paw. As hard as I was allowed to. We grappled. We drank. We were in ecstasy and in joyful worship. Of Rosella. (Dionysus... move over)
Obviously it passed the test. So now it's bottled. Like a Genie.
It has a lovely flavour that hovers between a grape juice and a Ribena (a blackcurrant cordial). It has a slight tang to it too. It contains lots of vitamins and goodness-ess. Then I gave some to my mother.
Cordials are popular in this hemisphere. They are very sweet concentrated fruit flavoured syrups that need to be diluted with cold water, topped with ice cubes and then served. In short, it contains copious amounts of sugar. It's the poor man's alternative to fruit juices. They are very refreshing.
The seeds found inside the sepals contain natural pectin and if these roselle sepals are to be cooked into a jam the seeds are boiled seperately in some water, drained, the seeds discarded and the gel like liquid that remains behind is added to the boiled sepals-sugar mixture to give it the final gel-like quality of jam. Fascinating.
PS ~ What a lovely and natural way to color cakes and icing.
The recipe ~ an approximation ~
300-350 gm roselle sepals
3 cups of granulated sugar
5-6 cups water
Rinse rosella sepals until clean. Drain. Pluck the sepals and remove all the seeds.
Place water in a pot. Add sepals and bring to a boil and then a medium simmer for about 8- 10 minutes. The water will turn crimson immediately. Add sugar and simmer again until the sugar dissolves. Give it a stir. When sugar has dissolved and the syrup is a gorgeous crimson drain through a sieve and discard the sepals.
Cool and store the syrup in a sterilized bottle.
To serve ~
Pour about an inch and a half of the Rosella syrup into a glass and then fill up to 3/4 way with chilled water. Add ice cubes if you like. Taste for sweetness. Add more of the syrup if not sweet enough or more water if too sweet. Add a squeeze of lime and some slices if desired. Drink and be refreshed.
It's a beautiful and gorgeous drink. How could one resist ?
Hi Zurin,
ReplyDeleteThe drink looks fabulous...Must try this..Looks lovely...I wanna grab a glass rite now...!!:)
Dr.Sameena@
www.myeasytocookrecipes.blogspot.com
I wish I could reach out for a glass now. I first drank this at a friend's house when I was 8 years old and I thought it was heavan's juice! Great photos, Zurin!
ReplyDeleteShirley, if you could reach out, please grab two glasses and reserve one for me. :-)) Looks so lovely!
ReplyDeleteWow, it's beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI also made this some time back, and I added french rose buds to it, and it tasted exactly like F&N's Rose Syrup, but all natural.
ReplyDeleteNice idea to slip in some lime slices.
Pink is just so pretty on the net..these cordials look so refreshing..I have the little flowers packed in syrup..not fresh like yours..
ReplyDeleteIn fact I have never seen those here.
Feeling thirsty just by looking at your pictures! I saw roselles sold at the market today but I hesitated buying. Will look for them tomorrow.
ReplyDeleteitis gorgeous... your pics are stunning too! anything with tons of sugar is right up my at little alley!
ReplyDeletelooks delicious lovely pictures
ReplyDeleteMy mum makes roselle cordial too! It's really quite a unique and pleasant flavour. :)
ReplyDeleteOh Zurin...these drinks look stunning. I can almost taste one right through the screen.
ReplyDeleteThey looks sooooo cool and refreshing!
Your pics are absolutely amazing!
L~xo
This is a very popular drink in the Caribbean at Christmas time. I use this often. It makes a wonderful jam, and pancake syrup...I even use it on top of cheesecake. I only wish my photos were as glorious as yours
ReplyDeleteShirley - if you have enough arms... I'll have some too. Never seen or heard of these - so unlikley ever to make it.
ReplyDeleteZurin - your photos are beautiful. So perfect for your book. They look like they are straight out of a magazine !
Almost too pretty to drink.
ReplyDeleteIrresistible...what a gorgeous colour! I'd grapple with you for a glassful...and probably more! Do I sound too greedy?
ReplyDeleteThis sounds fab! I have to look for this when I go back!
ReplyDeleteOh what a beautifully fantastic drink!
ReplyDeleteI agree, how can one resist?
i made this years ago n it didn't taste special. i must find some n use your recipe.
ReplyDeleteVery nice, great pictures, you really captured the beauty of the flower or seed?
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool looking flower, yes, a bit alien-like 8). And the drink looks refreshing and has such a lovely hue. Thanks for sharing this with us, Zurin!
ReplyDeleteI love this very much! It's always make me fresh ;)
ReplyDelete