CasperH wrote: ↑Mon Apr 25, 2022 2:22 pm
...... going to do some cocktails for a taste testing - at a bachelorette party.
.......they have to guess the ingredient?
.......Perhaps something with herbs.
A little late for the bachelorette party but maybe useful for future experimentation.
A few days ago I was browsing through an old field manual, written 50 years ago by a once famous naturalist named Euell Gibbons. (So your notion “herb cocktails” reminded me of that). In this book (
Stalking The Healthful Herbs) Gibbons devotes several pages of text to
Nepeta Cataria (the herb Catnip - originally from Europe). Catnip is a member of the mint family and while the plant is ecstasy for a cat to roll around in, it has been used in pleasant tasting herbal decoctions since long before the English began to import tea from the Orient. In some cases it is still preferred. I won't go into the high vitamin content, or the pharmacopoeias and dispensatories that Gibbons mentions for this influential herb, but they are numerous.
Elsewhere he discuses Peppermint and Spearmint; explains that they have been among the “
most famous and highly appreciated of all medicinal and flavoring herbs”, since ancient times. And even elsewhere he discusses another herb, named American Pennyroyal (or Squaw Mint); which he claims “
is a sweet-smelling herb that makes one of the most flavorful teas of any wild plant”.
These four plants mentioned are perennials, meaning they should grow back, year after year. These are the type of herbs that should be potted or planted around the perimeter of the house. If not for their homeopathic value, then for their aromatic and flavoring qualaties. It is said that mice despise peppermint, won't go near it. Supposedly repels flies too.
The typical Tom Collins cocktail is garnished with a cherry and an orange or lemon slice, but I see no reason why it can't be enhanced by swapping the cherry with a sprig or two of crushed mint (as used in a Mint Julep cocktail). You could put clippings of these herbs into a gin basket to make an “infusion”. But making a “tincture” would be more colorful and perhaps better tasting.