Strawberry Marigold Margaritas

angled5.jpg

It’s margarita season, everyone! Though I appreciate a great margarita all year round, there’s something about time between late-spring and early-summer that makes me crave all things citrus and tequila. Also, if you’re anything like us, margarita season really started somewhere around March 15 this year when we all started being stuck in our home. But today, it’s Cinco De Mayo, and it feels wrong not to be sitting outside in the sun, sipping on margs, so here we are.

I love marigolds and have spent the last few months looking for ways to add these little orange and yellow blossoms to anything and everything coming out of my kitchen. They are slightly floral, a little grassy, and complement almost any bright summer fruit you have hanging around. For this margarita, I cooked them with sugar and water to make a floral simple syrup, that is then added to muddled strawberries, lime juice and tequila for a margarita that just feels like the month of May. If you don’t have marigolds, feel free to substitute another herb or edible flower in its place. Rosemary makes a great simple syrup, rose pairs really beautifully with strawberries…really play around with whatever you have on hand.

And a few more Cinco De Mayo Recipes:

mexican hot chocolate cookies.png
MexHC10.jpg
grapefruit and ricotta flan

grapefruit and ricotta flan

guava and cheese pastelitos

guava and cheese pastelitos

above3.jpg

Strawberry Marigold Margaritas 

Yield: 2 margaritas

Ingredients: 

for the marigold simple syrup:

1/2 cup (100 g) sugar

1/2 cup (100 g) water

1/2 cup (.6 oz) marigold blossoms

for the margaritas: 

4 large strawberries, chopped

2 oz lime juice

1.5 oz marigold syrup 

4 oz tequila 

marigold salt, or regular salt, for rim

Procedure: 

to make the marigold syrup:

  1. Combine sugar, water, and marigold blossoms in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat and then simmer until sugar is completely dissolved. Remove from heat and let cool. When completely cool, strain out marigold blossoms. 

to make the margaritas: 

  1. To make marigold salt, finely chop the petals from one or two blossoms and combine them with one tablespoon kosher salt. 

  2. Muddle two strawberries and 3/4 ounces in the bottom of each glass. Add 1 oz of lime juice, and 2 oz tequila to each glass. Stir to combine and add ice. Enjoy!

Print Friendly and PDF

more recipes like this

greenjuicecocktail12.jpg

sangria verde

pomsagefrench75-3.jpg

pomegranate sage french 75

straighton3.jpg

citrus cappelletti spritz

Sangria Verde: A Green Juice Cocktail

greenjuicecocktail9.jpg

I know I’m a bit of an odd bird, but kale is one of my favorite foods. It’s definitely in my top five foods and I am always looking for ways to add kale to any and every dish in my kitchen. It’s so nutritious, exceptionally versatile, and I know it’s not popular opinion, but I think it’s delicious. A few months back, I went to out to dinner with Martin’s parents and my sister-in-law, Laura. I took them to one of our favorite Spanish-style tapas restaurants, one with really great patatas bravas and equally great cocktails. As I skimmed the cocktail list, a new, seasonal cocktail caught my eye because as I read the little menu blurb, I saw it had kale in it. Kale in my cocktail! I was sold. The drink was called a Sangria Verde and it was a vibrant green juice, filled with cucumbers, kale, and herbs, mixed with vodka and topped off with a citrusy, sparkly, white wine. It was bright and refreshing, slightly tart, with citrus notes and vegetal undertones.

It’s January 1st, and isn’t that what we all want? To keep drinking great cocktails, but feel a bit healthier while doing it? This is probably not a substitute for a run or a glass of water, but if you’re going to drink, adding a little kale isn’t a bad idea. Also, this recipe includes my favorite green juice recipe (no juicer required) and I suppose that if you weren’t into spiking it, you could just make the green juice and that would be a very healthy choice. For the rest of us, I recommend a bright, slightly citrusy white wine, like an Albarino, Vino Verde or Verdejo, with lots of salty and mineral notes.

greenjuicecocktail4.jpg
 

Sangria Verde: A Green Juice Cocktail

Yield for green juice: approx. 32 oz

Yield for cocktail mix: 1 cocktail

Ingredients:

for the green juice:

juice of 1 orange

juice of 1 lime

3 small apples (I used Gala), cored and cubed

4 cups kale, packed

2 small Persian cucumbers

1” pinch of fresh ginger, peeled

small handful of mint leaves, from 2-3 sprigs of mint

3 cups cold filtered water

optional garnish: orange or lime slices and mint sprigs

for the mint simple syrup:

2 oz water

2 oz sugar

2-3 sprigs fresh mint

for the sangria verde:

1/2 oz mint simple syrup

1 oz vodka

2 oz green juice

3 oz dry white wine, such as Albarino or Vino Verde

Procedure:

to make the green juice:

  1. In a high speed blender, combine all green juice ingredients. Blend on medium for 1 minute, and then increase speed to high and blend for 2-3 more minutes, until smooth and no large pieces remain.

  2. Strain green juice through a fine mesh sieve or cheesecloth into a jar, bowl, or large glass measuring cup. Transfer to an airtight storage container (I used a large mason jar) and refrigerate. Juice will keep for 2-3 days in the refrigerator. (Be sure to shake well before using.)


to make the mint simple syrup:

  1. In small saucepan set over medium heat, combine sugar and water. Stir gently and add mint sprigs. Bring to a boil and simmer until sugar is completely dissolved. Remove from heat and let cool to room temperature.

  2. Once cooled, remove mint springs (strain if any debris remains) and store in the refrigerator.

to make the sangria verde cocktail:

  1. In a small cocktail glass, stir together mint simple syrup, vodka, and green juice. Fill with ice and top with white wine.

Pomegranate Sage French 75

This weekend, we decorated our little duplex for Christmas. We went to the Christmas tree farm and picked out a barely-five-feet Frasier fir who has a bit of a side lean and we named him Felipe. Then we brought him home and my sweet, patient, loving husband spent three hours trying to construct a make-shift tree stand to tuck inside of a wicker basket in order to recreate a picture that I saw somewhere in the depths of Pinterest. It mostly worked and Felipe is now sparkling in all of his Christmas tree glory in our living room, although my basket tree stand idea doesn’t look exactly like the one from the manicured Pinterest apartment. My desired aesthetic was “minimalist festive” which is the fancy way of saying that I tried to spend as little money on decorations as physically possible so that I would have more money for all the things about Christmas that I really love— hosting dinner parties, making cheeseboards and elaborately decorated cookies, wine, and of course, new cocktails.

I love of a good holiday cocktail. I started working on this one a couple of months ago, right after Halloween when it became acceptable to start drinking holiday cocktails. It’s the perfect drink to take you all the way through the New Year. The pomegranate juice gives a tart, fruity flavor and provides that season-signature deep red color. The sage syrup and gin provide a gentle sweetness and an earthy, floral, component and the Champagne bubbles make it feel festive and party-worthy. This drink is also easy to scale up and mix ahead of time. If you’re heading out to an ugly sweater party or a Christmas Eve dinner, mix up a big batch of the pomegranate juice, sage syrup, and gin and bring a bottle of bubbly along. You can use any dry sparkling wine in place of Champagne (like Cava or Prosecco), but then you may have to change the name to a Spanish 75 or an Italian 75. :) Mix it any way you like, but I recommend enjoying this cocktail with lots of good friends, preferably under some twinkling lights.

Pomegranate Sage French 75

Yield: 4 cocktails 

Ingredients: 

6 oz gin

3 oz pomegranate juice 

1.5 oz sage syrup

8 oz dry champagne

Strips of orange zest from 1 orange

for the sage syrup: 

4 oz sugar 

4 oz water

3-4 sprigs of fresh sage

Procedure: 

  1. To make the sage simply syrup: combine equal parts sugar and water in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add sprigs of sage and bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. When sugar is dissolved, remove from heat and allow to cool completely. Remove sage (strain if needed) and refrigerate.

  2. For the cocktail: Combine gin, pomegranate juice, and sage syrup and mix well. Divide evenly between glasses. Top each glass with 2 oz champagne and 1 strip of orange zest. Add ice if desired.

pomsagefrench75-9.jpg