Cooking and Recipes
By: Aisling Bronach of House Shadow Drake
This recipe may be used for citrus peels, watermelon rinds, cucumber
meat, thinly sliced fruit, or the meat of the aloe plant. However,
caution should be used when using aloe as it will still retain its
laxative properties.
Prepare the `meat' by boiling it and removing the bitters. The skin
of the aloe, the green of the watermelon, and the white of the citrus
peel are all considered as part of the bitters. Next place the meat in
a sweet bath. Use a ratio of two parts sweet to one part boiling water.
For sweetener you can use honey, sugar, or even maple sugar. Continue
boiling until crystals begin to form. Then dry the candy on a rack and
store in a dry place.
To the sweet bath, try adding cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves or other
flavors. You can also use this same process to candy rose, mint,
marigold, calamus root, or other edible flowers.
If the candy you make turns out to be sticky or the crystals never
form, this means that you did not get your heat high enough. If you
have never made candy before, this can be a bit tricky. However, once
you know what to look for it gets a lot easier.