You’ll discover new flavors by inventing your own syrups | How to Drink

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • Classics with a twist, today we are playing with some really different flavors by making some out of the box syrups. Black pepper, saffron, macadamia...the possibilities are endless.
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    Making all of the Syrups: • Making all the Syrups:...
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    00:00 - Flavor Town
    02:08 - Black Pepper Syrup
    03:22 - Black Pepper Margarita
    06:29 - Tasting Notes
    07:32 - Cardamom Syrup
    08:11 - Cardamom Mojito
    10:10 - Tasting Notes
    11:02 - Saffron Syrup
    13:45 - Saffron Old Fashioned
    15:00 - Tasting Notes
    15:48 - Mellow Yellow
    17:55 - Tasting Notes
    20:27 - Turmeric Syrup
    21:44 - Turmeric Queen's Park Swizzle
    23:07 - Tasting Notes
    25:03 - Macadamia Orgeat
    25:57 - Macadamia Mai Tai
    27:09 - Tasting Notes
    28:48 - Wrap it up
    Default Soda Ratio:
    1 part syrup
    3 parts seltzer
    Black Pepper Margarita:
    Build in shaker
    2 oz. or 60 ml. Tequila
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Black Pepper Syrup
    .5 or 15 ml. Lime Juice
    Add ice and shake
    Strain into salt rimmed glass
    Cardamom Mojito
    Build in shaker
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Lime Juice
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Cardamom Syrup
    Few mint leaves
    2 oz. or. 60 ml. White Rum
    Add ice and shake
    Strain into glass
    Top with Seltzer
    Garnish with sprig of mint
    Saffron Old Fashioned:
    Build in glass
    .75 oz. or 22 ml. Saffron Syrup
    2 dashes Angostura Bitters
    2 oz. or 30 ml. Whiskey
    Add ice and stir
    Garnish with a twist of orange
    Mellow Yellow:
    Build in shaker
    1.5 oz. or 45 ml. Vodka
    .5 oz. or 15 ml. Lemon Juice
    .5 oz. or 15 ml. Cointreau
    .5 oz. or 15 ml. Saffron Syrup
    Add ice and shake
    Strain into glass
    Garnish with flamed orange peel
    Turmeric Queen's Park Swizzle:
    Build in glass
    Add mint leaves to the bottom of glass
    1.5 oz. or 45 ml. Rum (Appleton Reserve)
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Lime Juice
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Turmeric Syrup
    2 dashes of Angostura Bitters
    Add some crushed ice
    Stir
    Top with more crushed ice
    Macadamia Mai Tai:
    Build in shaker
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Lime Juice
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Macadamia Orgeat
    .5 oz. or 15 ml. Dry Curaçao
    1 oz. or 30 ml. Plantation O.F.T.D.
    .5 oz. or 15 ml. Appleton Estate
    .5 oz or 15 ml. Hamilton White Rum
    Add ice and shake
    Open pour into glass
    Garnish with lime and mint
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Комментарии • 663

  • @howtodrink
    @howtodrink  Год назад +65

    I’d love to hear about new syrups and ingredients you’ve made!
    We have a Podcast!
    Midnight Local RUclips: ruclips.net/user/midnightlocal
    Midnight Local Audio: bit.ly/MidnightLocal
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    twitter: bit.ly/H2DTwit
    instagram: bit.ly/H2dIG
    Blog: bit.ly/H2DBlog
    Patreon: bit.ly/H2DPatreon
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    Making all of the Syrups: ruclips.net/video/qAPDn-MRGSU/видео.html
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    • @Kaijugan
      @Kaijugan Год назад +3

      Hey, why didn't you do a sugar pine syrup or the pecan syrup? I'd love to see another Ranger Greg episode!

    • @ethanholliday4029
      @ethanholliday4029 Год назад +2

      Try your cardamom in a dark and stormy!

    • @brandonp7503
      @brandonp7503 Год назад +2

      Tazo Tea makes a green tea with ginger and pear that they call Green Ginger. I use it to make a ginger pear demerara syrup. I just cold brew the tea for 6 hours, add double the volume of brown sugar to that, and make it hot. I think you'll find it scrumptilescent. I use it in a drink I improperly call a ginger pear marTEAni. I prefer it with gin, but I've also done a vodka version for accessibility.
      Ginger pear marTEAni
      1.5 oz ginger pear infused vodka or gin
      2 oz pear juice
      1.5 oz Ginger pear syrup
      To make infused liquor
      Infuse 1 teabag for 8 hrs in 10 oz liquor
      Remove teabag
      To make syrup:
      Cold brew 1 teabag in 10 oz water for 6 hrs
      Remove teabag
      Mix 1 cup tea and 2 cups brown sugar in pot. Bring to boil while stirring. Sugar should be dissolved. If so, immediately remove from heat. If not, leave on heat and stir until combined.
      To make cocktail:
      Combine ingredients and shake with ice. Strain into glass.

    • @jilletdelphine
      @jilletdelphine Год назад

      how does one invent an ingredient? don’t the ingredients already exist. you invent the recipe

    • @TwistedMe13
      @TwistedMe13 Год назад +4

      Speaking of Orgeat variants, why not Pistachio?

  • @tallysingatsby
    @tallysingatsby Год назад +886

    Love the human instinct to do a little dance when you get the good flavor

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад +50

      That instinct also becomes more noticeable when intoxicated

    • @ffwast
      @ffwast Год назад +33

      Monkey moment

    • @derekhames6109
      @derekhames6109 Год назад +31

      Love how you phrased this as if you aren't a human, and are an anthropologist observing human behavior.

    • @irshfshy
      @irshfshy Год назад +12

      I call it happy wiggles...

    • @ToastedWaffles_
      @ToastedWaffles_ Год назад +15

      Neuron activation.

  • @swirlingtoilets
    @swirlingtoilets Год назад +247

    Lmao at the saffron soda reaction, "I would go to war over this, I would amass a navy for this"
    Greg entering his Byzantine arc

    • @pennyforyourthots
      @pennyforyourthots Год назад +28

      Does that imply that everything before this point was his Roman arc? Which video do you think qualifies as his fall of the Republic?

    • @EyeOfEld
      @EyeOfEld Год назад +19

      @@pennyforyourthots The Customer is Always Wrong? Or is that more his crisis of the 3rd century?

    • @aveimperia4026
      @aveimperia4026 7 месяцев назад +1

      I would have said his Venice arc, but Byzantine works too

  • @13mungoman13
    @13mungoman13 Год назад +796

    In Persian cuisine we grind our saffron in a spice grinder before using it, it is more potent and you can save a LOT of saffron that way.
    Leaving the threads in can be nice when you want them to be visible like in a paella or when making candy, but for a syrup like this, I'd say grind it into a powder.

    • @Zzyzzyzzs
      @Zzyzzyzzs Год назад +66

      Indeed saffron syrup already exists in Middle Eastern, west Asian and Indian regional cuisines. I know in Persian cuisine they use it to make sherbat drinks and flavour sweets like bamieh, and in Arabic desserts I've had it in little cakes which also had rosewater. The Indians call it kesar and the syrup is used to flavour desserts like falooda (basically a milkshake but with all kinds of things added to it like chopped dried fruit and jelly noodles) and they have versions of the sharbat drink as well.

    • @orifox1629
      @orifox1629 Год назад +24

      Not persian, instead my family grew up with sweet buns filled with candied fruits or raisins flavoured with saffron that we called Saffron Buns (they're from Cornwall in the UK). I think my gramma always used a mortar and pestle to crush the saffron. It ends up going into the water for the dough from there in her recipe

    • @ruben_skyline_
      @ruben_skyline_ 5 месяцев назад

      My mother in law is Persian and she makes an amazing saffron ice cream!

  • @ConnorSinclairCavin
    @ConnorSinclairCavin Год назад +71

    Interesting note on saffron: the flavor is much like cilantro’s soap effect, where there is a genetic component to how you experience the flavor, however its tied to 4 genes, one that impacts the scent, one that impacts the heat, one that impacts the floral, and one that impacts the earty notes

  • @hobbitguy1420
    @hobbitguy1420 Год назад +24

    *Sirens incoming, pull to a stop* This is the Semantics Police. Turmeric is not a root. It is, in fact, a type of underground stem called a rhizome. You have been surrounded. Come out with your delicious-looking syrups up.

  • @Jaeler9
    @Jaeler9 Год назад +352

    Am I the only one who wants a mixology book with all the experimental simples and experimental recipes, (pop culture recipes would be a bonus)? Probably called something like “with a twist”. Pretty please Greg and Meredith. We’ll throw in the cherries and olives.

    • @LuckySevenSamson
      @LuckySevenSamson Год назад +9

      WE REQUIRE THIS, imma throw literally all the money at that.

    • @HappilyMundane
      @HappilyMundane Год назад +6

      That is such a good name for it as well. I tip my hat to you, well done.

    • @ClockworkBlade
      @ClockworkBlade Год назад +6

      Greg’s Drinking Guide With A Twist!

    • @stephenrashbrook7667
      @stephenrashbrook7667 Год назад +1

      Yes please.

    • @LuckySevenSamson
      @LuckySevenSamson Год назад +3

      Bruh, just start with basic Cherry/Strawberry/Simple/Heavy Simple and then go from there. XD

  • @SoybeanGravy
    @SoybeanGravy Год назад +124

    To answer Greg’s question about whether there’s any capsaicin in pepper: I believe a chemical called piperine is responsible for the heat of pepper. NileRed talks a bit about it in his piperine extraction video, worth a watch.

    • @benf6822
      @benf6822 Год назад +5

      NileRed ftw!

    • @ariandynas
      @ariandynas Год назад +2

      They're both vanniloids!

    • @Earthstar_Review
      @Earthstar_Review 2 месяца назад +1

      I didn't know they're vanilloids! I'll have to read up on piperine, which I _always_ mispronounce with an m before the second p.

  • @mrkitewine7700
    @mrkitewine7700 Год назад +132

    I opened a tin of black cherries in syrup last week, once I’d used most of the cherries, I had the cherry flavoured syrup left over and decided to experiment, this worked out rather well.
    With the almond and the cherries giving a marzipan/amaretto like flavour there was a sort of godfather thing going on.
    50ml Makers Mark (or any other bourbon)
    5ml orgeat
    10ml black cherry syrup.
    Stir in a tumbler with a large lump of ice.
    Garnish with a black cherry

    • @tokenbastard4586
      @tokenbastard4586 Год назад +4

      That sounds goddamn delish.

    • @devin234
      @devin234 Год назад +1

      That sounds delightful! I’ll definitely be trying this

  • @jahanhashemi3291
    @jahanhashemi3291 Год назад +57

    In Iranian cuisine we usually use Saffron often with flavors like rose, lime, sour cherry, or orange. Playing on those flavors in the future, or perhaps with spices like cardamom and cinnamon would probably land you in a decent place most of the time. Something that plays with rice could be interesting too, like a saffron horchata.
    As always, loved your show!

    • @kelseyjaffer
      @kelseyjaffer 5 месяцев назад +1

      As a Pakistani, I was thinking rose, cardamom or cherry, too! It would be so good!

  • @jocelyngray6306
    @jocelyngray6306 Год назад +41

    I would totally buy sodas from Greg and Meredith's soda company. Please make it.

  • @FattyMcFox
    @FattyMcFox Год назад +16

    The type of spicy compound in black pepper is called "Piperine" and it is distinct from Capsaicin. So a recipe with both Black Pepper and a Capsaicin pepper is not redundant, they both have something to add to the flavor.

  • @Quidividilake
    @Quidividilake Год назад +5

    Three seconds in and Greg is already stimming. This is gonna be a good one.

  • @JohnKelly2
    @JohnKelly2 Год назад +62

    For the black pepper margarita, maybe do a regal shake with a strip of orange peel to get the orange notes without adding sweetness

  • @te3655
    @te3655 Год назад +75

    Hi huge fan here who happens to be Moroccan and live in the states! I was sad when you talked about Saffron being big in Latin America because I don’t think its as big there as it is in MENA. It’s truly a big ingredient for middle eastern/south asian/north african cuisine. You can go to Persian markets and buy Saffron syrup pre made. I would also like to mention the Saffron ice cream that you can buy in LA which is in a league of its own!! Just want credit where credit is due, I really appreciate you ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

    • @connortheandroidsentbycybe7740
      @connortheandroidsentbycybe7740 8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed, it's only a thing in Iberian/Latin cooking *because* of North African "Moors"

    • @roan9914
      @roan9914 2 месяца назад

      Saffron ice cream ah such a simple yet delicious treat, just vanilla ice cream saffron syrup and rose water

  • @Lazarus3737
    @Lazarus3737 Год назад +50

    The Lime-Pepper combo makes sense to me. Reminds me of lemon pepper seasoning. Wonder what foods it could pair with.
    Apparently, did a quick google search (!could be wrong!), but some people can't taste saffron, or at the very least, have a minimal sense of taste for it.

  • @MGDrzyzga
    @MGDrzyzga Год назад +38

    You know what would be a nice follow-up to making syrups?!
    An episode on bitters!
    I found this channel, IDK, a couple months ago, and so of course I had to get angostura bitters. That said, I prefer the azteca bitters I got - chocolate, cinnamon, cayenne, and probably clove or nutmeg.... yeah, I want to get cocktail advice on that one. But let's expand the scope to how to show off very different types of bitters!

    • @MuriKakari
      @MuriKakari Год назад +1

      Yeah! Greg got a fancy box of bitters, but so far has only used one in a geek drink that I remember. Would be really cool to see all of them explored.

  • @jasonbaker1887
    @jasonbaker1887 Год назад +84

    I've made both black pepper and cardamom syrups before I've used both in old fashioned variations and I've added the cardamom to a gimlet and the black pepper to a strawberry basil smash and a Daiquiri. Really flavorful great drinks

    • @drakas110
      @drakas110 Год назад +1

      yea i was thinking about the black pepper in an old fashion, seems to be a god pairing with whiskey

  • @stephensteele3553
    @stephensteele3553 Год назад +18

    I remember reading that saffron is one of those things you can taste or not taste depending on genetics. I'll see if i can find a source on that though.

    • @amberluning5497
      @amberluning5497 Год назад +1

      I'm so curious if that's the case, because I genuinely can't taste it (and I know I have had good saffron). I really thought that it was just for making rice yellow.

  • @grammar_antifa
    @grammar_antifa Год назад +29

    For black pepper, I recommend pairing it with strawberry. I've made a drink with that pairing in the past and it was delicious. It would probably also work really well with pink peppercorns strawberry. I made a cake once with pink peppercorn and strawberry buttercream.

    • @WalkinStereotype
      @WalkinStereotype Год назад +5

      Black pepper and strawberry is such an underutilized great pairing! I was first introduced to it when I made an icebox cake recipe from Alton Brown, now I try it when I can, even on toast with strawberry jam. So good

    • @edpulsifer776
      @edpulsifer776 Год назад +2

      Black pepper and cantaloupe is another awesome combination.

  • @Tikuros
    @Tikuros Год назад +6

    A pinch of safron to a whole pot of chicken soup elevates the whole thing to another level. Just make sure you use it at the end, when basically everything else is already cooked. Just a few minutes of cooking is enough. It will change the broth to a vibrant yellow and it is a game changer

  • @HailKosm
    @HailKosm Год назад +39

    Saffron from my cooking experience is a very subtle spice/herb, like when you make a saffron rice for like a paella, you can smell the floral saffron and can see the yellow color but you don't really taste it that much. It gets kinda lost with the other spices you are incorporating into the rice. I think if you want a more potent, like mediterranean flavors I would use something like asofoetida resin, cumin or bay leaf. I think a Bay leaf syrup could work really well.

    • @AhNee
      @AhNee Год назад +2

      If I forget to put it in my korma, though, I can tell.

  • @Rolandais
    @Rolandais Год назад +5

    Interestingly Carrots and Tumeric are about as unrelated as plants can be being from two seperate clades, the tumeric is however in the ginger family :)

  • @Ninja-The-Red-Shinobi
    @Ninja-The-Red-Shinobi Год назад +4

    Are we on the Mad Scientist Arc?
    cuz if so then I'm all here for it!

  • @AnAcceptedName
    @AnAcceptedName Год назад +18

    I'll be honest, homemade syrups are the last part of my cocktail journey that I havent gone down. I have a fully stocked bar and always have mixers on hand, but syrups are something I have yet to play around with. So thank you so much for this video. I hope it gives me the motivation to recreate some of these.

    • @brandonp7503
      @brandonp7503 Год назад +2

      You'll be glad you did. Syrups are so easy and add so much.

    • @pennyforyourthots
      @pennyforyourthots Год назад +3

      Yeah, I always find it kind of weird that people tend to start with the modifiers instead of the sweetener. The sweetener is way easier to actually mess around with, especially since you can do little small batches (I personally make my test batches about 1 cup of sugar to a half cup of water)

  • @Gremalkin1979
    @Gremalkin1979 Год назад +7

    Saffron and cointreau and soda is my xmas drink. Saffron is used heavy during that season here in sweden, mostly in buns.

  • @gustavchambert7072
    @gustavchambert7072 Год назад +17

    I have a honey-based black pepper and vanilla bean syrup I use for one of my drinks.
    That stuff is awesome

  • @claclarolo1
    @claclarolo1 Год назад +3

    Hawthorn blossoms are everywhere atm, I recommend anyone to make a syrup with them! As a cordial it tastes very honey like, so good. I used it in a tom colins

  • @MW-qt9ts
    @MW-qt9ts Год назад +4

    The compound in Black Pepper that is 'spicy' is a different one than other peppers. It's called piperine.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 Год назад +16

    Greg, Meredith might have a genetic oddity where she can't. Or maybe it's you and your genes. There are certain things that people will or will not pick up on based on their genetic makeup. For me, the smell of Cilantro is DISH SOAP!!! It's not bad when it's mixed into something, like salsa. But oh my god! when you start mincing Cilantro, all I smell (and subsequently taste) is dish soap. Also, artificial sweeteners have an aluminum/metallic taste to them that most people don't taste. I can't drink anything made with artificial sweeteners.

    • @tannerpoulis3156
      @tannerpoulis3156 3 месяца назад

      to be fair cilantro is actually used in some soaps and even the basic taste of coke

  • @jayleno2192
    @jayleno2192 Год назад +11

    I like to look at the herbal tea at my local Mexican grocery store for ideas. There's the normal stuff like hibiscus and chamomile of course, but also things like boldo and damiana. For around $3 for a box of herbal tea bags you're really not losing much if you try it and end up not liking it.

  • @YODAddyLIVE
    @YODAddyLIVE Год назад +5

    At the Royal Hawaiian they are famous for the "Pink Mai Tai" but we also have a twist in Hawaii that you may want to look into called the Li-Hing Margaritta. Li-Hing is basically dried plum originally from China that has become quite the staple in Hawaii. Comes in liquid form to be poured over Shave ice or added to a cocktail and can also be found in powdered form so you can rim the glass.

  • @maromania7
    @maromania7 Год назад +22

    Love seeing you get excited about a new drink. With how experienced you are, seeing you do a little dance over the turmeric is about as good of an endorsement as something can get. Can't wait to try myself!

  • @IQzminus2
    @IQzminus2 10 месяцев назад +2

    As a swede we do a lot of saffron stuff. It’s one of our main Yule flavours. A pretty common flavour pairing here is saffron with cognac. Like infusing some saffron in Cognac is pretty common, they bring out nice things in each-other.
    But we mainly do a lot of desserts where saffron is the main flavour. So a sweet saffron syrup used in drinks sounds interesting.
    Also I agree saffron is a very strong flavour.
    But hard to describe, floral in a deep weird way sort of like vanilla, but it doesn’t taste like vanilla.

  • @caesarsalad77
    @caesarsalad77 Год назад +3

    That Mai Tai sounds amazing. Given the association of macadamias with Hawaii, you could just call it a Big Island Mai Tai.

  • @shirosenshiesq
    @shirosenshiesq Год назад +1

    That Ruby Rodd reference after Greg's "bzzz!" sound absolutely killed me for a good few minutes!

  • @father_jordan
    @father_jordan Год назад +15

    I just got into making my own syrups and turning them into sodas, so this was really neat to see. My current favorites are florals like lavender and rose. I want to try all of these.

  • @IronCrown
    @IronCrown Год назад +2

    Thumbnail POV: You're a bottle of angostura bitters that Greg thought he lost

  • @stoopidpants
    @stoopidpants Год назад +3

    Really impressed how you corrected the cardamom from "earthy" to "perfumed". Cardamom is a semi-common note in many perfumes/colognes.

  • @simonrichards4114
    @simonrichards4114 Год назад +1

    Saffron tastes like a sweetened version of an old wool rug just in the best way possible.
    It's musky, sweet, kinda dusty. It's incredible but such a unique flavour.

  • @Gcnico
    @Gcnico Год назад +1

    Having Meridith's head pop up in the fore ground brings MST3K vibes. I feel like that would be a hilarious episode if it was ever done.

  • @EdieBird
    @EdieBird Год назад +8

    I don't drink, but I love mixing stuff together. One recipe I found was for a spicy watermelon aqua fresca. I had to make syrup with HOT SAUCE. (I used Frank's because that's the one I always have) Then, you juice a watermelon (smush it through a sieve), mix that with coconut water, and add the syrup until it tastes right. I also added a bit of kosher salt, as I like salted watermelon. It was damn delicious and very weird. It might be time to make it again as we're heading into the hot weather season.

    • @skaboopydoopthedoop8711
      @skaboopydoopthedoop8711 Год назад +1

      What is the ‘right’ taste like?

    • @EdieBird
      @EdieBird Год назад +1

      @@skaboopydoopthedoop8711 hard to pin down. Very much a watermelon flavor, just a little salt kind of wakes it up a bit, and enough hot sauce to accent but not overwhelm. I just keep adding until it tickles my brain. Lol And of course what is perfect to me might be too sweet or not spicy enough for someone else.

    • @foggyfrogg
      @foggyfrogg 10 месяцев назад +2

      That sounds very interesting but delicious

  • @lindabutler9523
    @lindabutler9523 Год назад +4

    I just happened to already have Saffron syrup on-hand so I’m really excited to try that drink! Also, I’m from Minnesota so not all midwesterners are immune to saffron’s charms😂

  • @Antaios632
    @Antaios632 Год назад +5

    Another one you should try is avocado pit orgeat. It's super cheap since you're basically making it from garbage, but surprisingly nutty and smooth.

  • @gamemasteranthony2756
    @gamemasteranthony2756 Год назад +2

    RE: Lavender Simple
    I actually had a drink that used Lavender Simple that I enjoyed. It was called the “Princess of Shadows” and was a drink created based on Fire Emblem.

    • @xiaop12
      @xiaop12 Год назад

      That name reminds me of Camilla from Fates so much, I don't really know why.

  • @ncsupi
    @ncsupi Год назад +2

    I always like making cucumber syrups. Sometimes with mint. It makes good soda, and plays nice with gin.

  • @SuperStarr817
    @SuperStarr817 Год назад +12

    This was such a good video! I love using my lavender and rose syups in gin drinks, so I'm excited about all the inspo in this video. Literally about to make rhubarb syrup.
    Please do a bitters episode like this eventually btw! Get weird with some fun bitters.

  • @danomyster4746
    @danomyster4746 Год назад +2

    wintergreen berrys and gin! soak em for a day or two and strain, faint yellow hue.
    when you add lemon juice it turns pink! and it tastes like double buble bubble gum :)

  • @beccalarson5982
    @beccalarson5982 Год назад +7

    I got some cardamom extract for Christmas (Burlap and Barrel) and have been using it in place of bitters in my old fashioneds it's AWESOME!

  • @toddavis8151
    @toddavis8151 Год назад +3

    Recently my mum cooked some quinces and accidentally put too much sugar in them creating a lovely quince flavoured syrup. My first thought when tasting it was how a cocktail could be built around it

  • @elh93
    @elh93 Год назад +4

    The first flavored syrup I made was marsala chai, it was delicious.

  • @bonefat21
    @bonefat21 Год назад +3

    I made a watermelon syrup that I really love with equal parts by weight of watermelon chunks and sugar in a container with lots of shaking. I'm almost blown away how much it tastes of watermelon. I also have a hibiscus syrup that I made as a 2:1 simple, but I pre-measured the water and let some dried hibiscus leaves steep in it overnight before making the syrup.

  • @MrBenfranz
    @MrBenfranz Год назад +2

    Saffron was the floral herb that powered my Mom's sabbath cooking. All the best dishes - Moghul Stewed Chicken, Paella of Chicken and Short Rib, Arroz con Pollo, Saffron Rice with Stewed plums, Saffron and Apricot Veal Stew, etc. were powered by Saffron. Such a beautiful, fresh, and fragrant flavoring. I am definitely gonna use that Mellow Yellow recipe and brew up Saffron Syrup ASAP!!

  • @TrulyZer0
    @TrulyZer0 Год назад +3

    So glad that the syrup sequel is finally here!
    I get that I COULD invent new ones on my own.. but, I prefer that you make them first so I know you lived long enough after consuming them to at least edit and upload a video about it.

  • @Dadwar_Dev
    @Dadwar_Dev Год назад +1

    if this man made a bar, everyone would flock to it, I don't even drink yet I watch this man's vids, good job greg

  • @CreedofDarkness
    @CreedofDarkness Год назад +1

    One of my favorite drinks is actually a Pear/Cardamom soda from France. Lightly sweet, big pear flavour and a hint of the cardamom in the background, it's like, $7 a bottle, but it's great for a celebration or holiday.

  • @ninjanerdfighter
    @ninjanerdfighter Год назад +3

    What a delight to realize i have everything i need in the house for a cardamom mojito!! and that syrup would probably be great in coffee.... loved this ep!!

  • @phvrieler
    @phvrieler Год назад +2

    Video-idea: What about shrubs? What kinds are there and how can you use it in cocktails?
    And a tip: asian stores usually have lots of sodas based on different fruits like tamarind that are more unusual. At least for a Dutchie

  • @jasonjanes7582
    @jasonjanes7582 6 месяцев назад

    One of my favorite vids! Thank you 🙏

  • @Mikethebeard64
    @Mikethebeard64 Год назад

    Another great video. Thank you for making me want to try soooo many drinks I've never had. Very entertaining.👏👏

  • @Worldtraceur
    @Worldtraceur Год назад +1

    Love to see this kinda of experimentation, it is always a blast!

  • @OlEgSaS32
    @OlEgSaS32 Год назад +1

    The last part of this video really amused me because just today Tasting History (alt title Drinking History when it comes to beverages) did a history of the Mai Tai episode and I actually knew what Greg was talking about

  • @elijahsandlin495
    @elijahsandlin495 Год назад

    Anyone else really like the intro. I love the music, while also putting a little preview of the drinks. I also love the sound at the end, it like you put down a glass weirdly, it straitened out.

  • @sarahnevra241
    @sarahnevra241 Год назад +3

    Your how to make syrups video inspired me to mess around with fruit and herb combos and I've basically been doing what you just did with them. Fruit syrup and a little seltzer and I've got a soda that tastes way better than anything I can get in the store AND I can control how strong/sweet it is depending on my mood or what I'm eating with it.

  • @MrUltimatesmileyface
    @MrUltimatesmileyface Год назад +5

    Lavender and Gin are the bomb! Awesome content as usual Greg!

    • @lmsmith015
      @lmsmith015 Год назад +1

      I like to make lavender-infused gin! That way I don't have to add simple syrup (since I don't like sweet cocktails)

  • @tee_nanners
    @tee_nanners Год назад +2

    Greg, thank you so much for this video! Every now and then I'll comment I'd love to see more non alcoholic stuff because I'm a big fan of that, too.
    For a syrup I made on my own (Since I also still use your Dune Spice Soda, even now) I made a "Dragon's Fire" soda from dragon fruit, blueberrys (to give it more flavor) and some red pepper flakes and cinnamon to give a bit of a kick. It wasn't bad, it was kinda like those Habanero Strawberry sodas that were popular a few years ago. If I make it again and you're interested, I'll send you the recipe

  • @ganderian
    @ganderian Год назад +1

    My favorite unusual syrup/cocktail combo was a Chamomile Gin Fizz I came up with a few years ago for a springtime party!

  • @taikaperhonen6484
    @taikaperhonen6484 Год назад +2

    I'm half Iranian and I _adore_ saffron. It's one of my favourite spices. The thought of a saffron lemonade honestly has me pretty excited. 😅☺

  • @ou812927
    @ou812927 Год назад

    Awesome video, thank you so much for doing that.

  • @Kinography
    @Kinography 11 месяцев назад +1

    9:16 I typically muddle mojitos for the lime oils, not the mint. I use quartered limes instead of lime juice which I feel adds to the complexity but that’s just me.
    I also shake it so I agree that muddling the mint isn’t necessary

  • @Calcprof
    @Calcprof Год назад +3

    I had some great Macadamia gelato in Sicily. They also had (which was also great) macadamia and pistachio nut gelato.

  • @mpbx3003
    @mpbx3003 Год назад +3

    I'm here for Greg beginning a life of obnoxious luxury and starting to drink saffron sodas every day. [While fantasizing about going to war for saffron.]

  • @kthxbi
    @kthxbi Год назад +1

    I recently had a saffron syrup in a latte, ad it was one of the best coffees i've ever had

  • @djzipster147
    @djzipster147 Год назад +1

    Travelling through Thailand I had a cocktail with tamarind and lemongrass syrup and it was SO delicious! Absolutely nothing like anything I'd tasted in a cocktail before. Would recommend!!!

  • @MultiFreedom9
    @MultiFreedom9 Год назад +2

    speaking of really neat infusions with peppercorns, I made a really good szechuan peppercorn infused london dry gin a while ago that was incredibly fun to play with

  • @brandonp7503
    @brandonp7503 Год назад +2

    Basil syrup is amazing for gin drinks. I was inspired to do it by the basil julep.

  • @StupidIsMyJob
    @StupidIsMyJob Год назад

    It's not often that looking at alcoholic drinks makes me thirsty, but that macadamia nut mai tai has my mouth watering, and me thinking.
    Thanks for your work, guys!

  • @nick83rocks
    @nick83rocks Год назад +1

    I made a rooibos tea demarrara syrup once, and it had this crazy tobacco flavor that worked really well in an old fashioned.

  • @Inga52282
    @Inga52282 Год назад +2

    The Monkeypod mai tai uses macadamia orgeat and a passion fruit foam on top. It's quite tasty too.

  • @nategorter4376
    @nategorter4376 Год назад +1

    The black pepper syrup would go really well in a French 75. Place near me does one of those and I was pleasantly surprised!

  • @JC-fj7oo
    @JC-fj7oo Год назад +1

    Cardamom and coffee are the way to go. Make a white russian, but use cardamom syrup, black coffee, and possibly a sweeter alcohol like rum and a splash of cream.
    I call it "The white turkish" and it will be the best WR you've ever tried. The dude approves.

  • @qazzaqstan
    @qazzaqstan Год назад +2

    I need to just make turmeric syrup at some point. I've been avoiding making more syrups because of storage space but it is just a flavor I like too much and is pretty unique.

  • @jayhorvinski8337
    @jayhorvinski8337 Год назад +1

    Meredith is right on the money.....Saffron is very subtle!

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Год назад +2

    Your videos are so awesome!🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊

  • @linden4372
    @linden4372 Год назад +1

    Oooh cardamom mojito makes a lot of intuitive sense. I like to joke that if you took beach sand and scented it with menthol you could trick someone into thinking it was ground cardamom at a glance lol. It has a minty-ness association, is what I’m trying to say.

  • @CDWilliams
    @CDWilliams Год назад +2

    Love your stuff. I make my own syrups now. I keep home made Simple, Ginger, Honey, and Demerara. I've been doing 1:1 but will now move to 2:1. Been thinking of doing my own Orgeat. Definitely a money saver and really let's you make a drink your own.

  • @caseyjmoreno8653
    @caseyjmoreno8653 Год назад +1

    Fun fact! I work at a Brooklyn Persian restaurant called Eyval and we do a saffron infused liquor in a martini as one of our signature drinks and it’s such a fun drink ~

  • @Martyn2021
    @Martyn2021 Год назад +2

    The thumbnail with the little pots of ingredients remind me quite a lot of the Townsend from thumbnail in fact I thought it was a Townsend crossover video,

  • @TallDarknGruesome
    @TallDarknGruesome Год назад

    Made home made maracha cherries a couple of years ago. 2 parts turbinado sugar, 1 part kirchwasser, pickling salt and a little allspice and nutmeg. Simmered and then bottled up and let pickle in the cherry brandy syrup for a month. Texture turned out amazing, but the syrup had wildly over extracted the resins from the allspice and left everything with a cougH syrup finish.

  • @phyternl
    @phyternl Год назад +1

    Making the black pepper syrup tonight, I can see that working in so many drinks. I would like to try it with long pepper though.

  • @andrewcarpenter270
    @andrewcarpenter270 11 месяцев назад +1

    I made spruce tip syrup this year. it's pretty cool. I bet you would like it. it's got a legit pineey, sprucey taste, no tannins, and a cool citrus finish.

  • @mememaster5748
    @mememaster5748 Год назад

    Just finished watching an episode and was looking for something else to watch, good timing :D

  • @Zzz_asleep
    @Zzz_asleep Год назад +1

    Recently found out about clarifying cocktails..would love a HTD episode about The Science of Clarified Cocktails :)

  • @VampyrMygg
    @VampyrMygg Год назад

    Saffron is used a bit here in Norway, baking yellow saffron buns around easter time and for Santa Lucia.

  • @slottedpig2253
    @slottedpig2253 Год назад +1

    Thats wild. Black Pepper soda water out of a Glencairn lol I love the content you push on this channel. The slowmo, the side shots, just overall an amazing show. Keep it coming dude!

  • @catpsychic5383
    @catpsychic5383 Год назад +1

    Theres this stupid fancy resturant that I go to like once a year on my birthday and the bartender there makes really good mocktails. Instead of alcohols she'll build a drink using syrups made of different spices... they're incredibly amazing.

  • @dariopasquino10
    @dariopasquino10 Год назад +2

    this is a cool video that really fits a category you dont sea too often it'd be cool to see you try different syrups out occasionally that arent your bog standard, things like lemongrass, hibiscus, tonka bean syrups are all fun ones ive tried or had out, but itd be cool seeing some strange spices and syrups as well as maybe weird sugars used as syrups, things like treacle, condensed milk, coconut sugar etc all have potential in my eyes

  • @Adam684
    @Adam684 Год назад

    Really enjoyed this episode. More riffs and more syrups please!

  • @aaronmiller2578
    @aaronmiller2578 Год назад

    Great EP!

  • @DrinkGameRepeat
    @DrinkGameRepeat Год назад +1

    Turmeric is one of my favourite spices, so happy to see it being used for more interesting things!