There seem to be rather a lot of people interested in cooking and baking, so maybe we can swap recipes 
Given the current weather conditions in Europe I'd like to start with something refreshing.
My sister returned from a vacation in Georgia (the oriental country, not the US state) with the recipe for a delicious and very unusual lemonade made from Tarragon. The recipe is very easy:
Tarhun (Georgian Tarragon lemonade)
Pick 4-5 large handsfull of tarragon leaves and blend them or cut them into bits. If you leave them whole, just cook them a few minutes longer.
Add the peel of a large organic lemon.
Simmer both together for about 20 minutes in a mixture of 2 litres water (half a gallon) and 1.5-2 kg (3-4 lbs)sugar (you can use less sugar, then it tastes better but will keep shorter).
Filter the tarragon out and bring the remaining clear greenish syrup to a rolling boil.
Fill in sterilized bottles and seal immediately.
To serve, dilute the syrup with water or soda to taste and add lemon juice (or a key lime - that's even better as I discovered yesterday) and a few ice cubes.
The syrup is lovely green at first but will oxidize quickly and then turn yellowish. If you'd like a froggy-green drink, you have to prepare and serve it fresh. Or you can add a drop of food colouring.
At any colour pretty yummy stuff imho

Given the current weather conditions in Europe I'd like to start with something refreshing.
My sister returned from a vacation in Georgia (the oriental country, not the US state) with the recipe for a delicious and very unusual lemonade made from Tarragon. The recipe is very easy:
Tarhun (Georgian Tarragon lemonade)
Pick 4-5 large handsfull of tarragon leaves and blend them or cut them into bits. If you leave them whole, just cook them a few minutes longer.
Add the peel of a large organic lemon.
Simmer both together for about 20 minutes in a mixture of 2 litres water (half a gallon) and 1.5-2 kg (3-4 lbs)sugar (you can use less sugar, then it tastes better but will keep shorter).
Filter the tarragon out and bring the remaining clear greenish syrup to a rolling boil.
Fill in sterilized bottles and seal immediately.
To serve, dilute the syrup with water or soda to taste and add lemon juice (or a key lime - that's even better as I discovered yesterday) and a few ice cubes.
The syrup is lovely green at first but will oxidize quickly and then turn yellowish. If you'd like a froggy-green drink, you have to prepare and serve it fresh. Or you can add a drop of food colouring.
At any colour pretty yummy stuff imho
