1 cup dried rose petals
1 to 1 1/2 cup dried citrus peels
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground clove
3-4 drops patchouli essential oil or
1/2 cup dried patchouli leaves
2 drops sandalwood essential oil or
1/3 cup dried sandalwood chips
This recipe produces a wonderfully spicy mix, but if you make it and wish to vary the proportions, by all means, as with all cottage crafts and art, make it suit you! You certainly won't hurt my feelings if you change it, or for that matter, like it so much that you multiply the recipe and claim it as your own. I personally have made soap with all essential oils that approximate the scent of this, and it has never gone unappreciated when presented as a gift. That said, there were at last count more than two hundred sites I found that had their own rose potpourri recipes, and I find myself sighing, "so many things to try, so few rose petals!"
Save a few though, assuming no pesticides have been used, for these ideas:
- a fresh rose petal in each cell of an ice cube tray, filled with water or lemonade and frozen, makes a beautiful garnish floated in light summer beverages or cocktails
- fresh rose petals dunked in a cooled "simple syrup" (1 part sugar to 1 part water boiled heated until the sugar completely dissolves) and then spread in a single layer on a cookie sheet in the freezer make beautiful cake decorations or pretty ice cream garnishes
- candied fresh rose petals (even prettier!) are made with dunking each petal into a whipped egg white (you may want to use pasteurized eggs) and then into granulated sugar. Stored in the 'fridge between layers of waxed paper they're beautiful on almost anything ....well, maybe not steak...or mashed potatoes....or tuna salad ....nevermind.
0 Comments