This year we have a super- abundance of lemons, on our own trees, and so do neighbours and sundry cousins all of whom are giving us bags of bounty which, this year, we don't need. They get left on the doorstep or at the gate, no way we can refuse. At the moment I'm squeezing lemon after lemon of those given to us as they seem to be going soft and rotting very quickly. Ours are still on the tree and there they will remain till I have dealt with the 'foreign' fruit.
Amaryllis flower under the lemon tree
Today I'm juicing and making fresh lemonade syrup which will be put into 1/2 litre bottles and frozen so we can drink lemonade all through the summer.. and probably next summer. Homemade and fresh (-ly unfrozen), the perfect drink to offer a hot summer visitor.
I will also freeze a few bottles of plain juice.
These lemons have loads of juice, unlike the year my neice K was visiting from Australia. She tried to make a lemon meringue pie but didn't manage to get even a drop out of the dozen lemons she 'squeezed'. Fortunately she's an Australian (with kiwi roots) and just took it in her stride and made us a delicious peach pie. Peaches are luscious whatever the year
Recipe
Boil together a mug of sugar and a mug of water. They don't really need to boil much, just enough for the sugar to melt. When the syrup is cold, add the mug and a half of lemon juice. Give it a good stir and bottle. It should keep in the fridge for about three weeks.
To make into lemonade, pour a third of a glass of cordial and top up with cold water and ice and a leaf or two of mint.
If it is too sweet or too tart for your liking you can add more sugar to the next batch or more lemon juice.
I don't boil the syrup once I add the lemon juice. I hope this way I preserve more of the vitamin C. I don't strain the juice either. I like the bits of lemon flesh drifting around in the glass. Seems more authentic.
I have also seen recipes using honey or stevia.
To make it even more refreshing you could add some lemon peel to the syrup or even a piece of fresh ginger. Here some also add a few leaves of abororizo.
See the recipe for red wine liqueur flavoured with this flower under the label 'greek drinks'
Abororizo - pink pelagonia I think is the english translation. The leaves of the pelagonia have a slight lemony taste and are often used here in liqueurs and sweets
Two bottles of juice ready for the freezer and half a bottle of cordial. You can make the syrupy cordial and freeze that as well if you want lemonade all through the year
What could be finer than a glass of freshly-squeezed lemon juice in the hot summer months.....hmm.
ReplyDeleteYou make the most out of all the produce available to you, I'm most impressed.
Cheers!
~Jo
There are so many this year I can't keep up with them but I can't just let them for. Greeks use lemon juice in everything so we have trays of ice lemon cubes as well
DeleteOut of all the world's flavours, lemon must be my favourite. How lucky you are to have them growing naturally outdoors. Here they have to be in huge pots and taken indoors for winter. I can't be bothered.
ReplyDeleteThese trees loved last year's snow. They are well established though, here long before us.
DeleteI wouldn't bother either if I had to move pots around!
Sounds wonderful and no doubt very refreshing. You should sell some of your homemade lemonade. They call Poteen "White Lemonade" here in Ireland. Do Limes grow on your island?
ReplyDeleteEveryone s making their own lemonade this year. I gave it away. Lines are not popular here. I'm sure they would grow. We have all the other citrus fruits too.
DeleteOnly lemons are used in greek cooking, for some reason
All that talk of lemons makes me want something lemon flavoured. Of course, all our lemons here in Canada have to be imported. I have never made home made lemonade before. Usually it is frozen concentrate mixed with water. -Jenn
ReplyDeleteFrozen lemonade is the way to go for you. I'm sure you have lots f produce that we don't get here. Berries maybe.
DeleteFresh!!!! Everything!!!! The way to go!!!!!!
ReplyDelete'Course, you are so lucky, to have your own and neighbor's lemons. Which you know are natural and organic and have not traveled miles and miles, in a truck, to get to you.
Enjoy!!!!
Straight from the tree to the table! Lucky there were two big trees here when we bought the house
DeleteWould be the perfect drink in the hot summer heat. With lots of ice. Yummmmm
ReplyDeleteThe rabbits have stripped the bark from my lemon tree it won’t survive.
I’m hoping now the cats are outside they will chase the rabbits away from the house and garden
We will see
Pity about your lemon trees. Where I was brought up in NZ it was a huge citrus area, and kiwi fruit, and we had a big tree near the house.
Delete