Homemade Orgeat Syrup (French Barley Water)Home >> Recipes
I am a fiend for orgeat syrup. There is just something magic in seeing these little drop of sweet syrup turn a whole bottle of Evian into an opalescent mist. It tastes like a milky relative of amaretto but has no alcohol. I never knew how orgeat syrup was made until I saw a recipe in the Larousse des Desserts, which is illustrated step-by-step on this page. Modern orgeat syrup is made from almonds, but originally it was literally barley water, a decoction of raw barley sweetened with sugar. At some point people started adding bitter almonds for flavor and then realized that the barley itself, for all its virtues, does not bring much by way of flavor and it is dropped altogether in modern recipes. Replacing barley with almonds in orgeat syrup has a well-established tradition. Sure, some will argue this is no longer true barley water. But it sure tastes good. I found an amusing discussion of this culinary problem in Diderot's monumental Encyclopédie (under 'Orgeat' in Volume 11 'N - Parkinsone' published in December 1765). Orge is French for barley.
This recipe is modern and focuses on taste. Orgeat syrup is not a medicine although I would enjoy being sick much more if medicines tasted like this. ORGEAT SYRUP300gr blanched whole almonds 100gr white almond powder 2 liters mineral water About 3kg white sugar Rose water to taste Orange flower water Bitter almond extract
Roughly chop the whole almonds.
Pour 400gr of caster sugar in a large pot.
Add the chopped almonds and the ground almonds.
Add 2 liters/quarts mineral water and bring to a boil.
Leave to rest for 12 hours. ... Article continues NEXT PAGE... |
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