Lavender in your cooking!


Lavender hidcote
Lavender Hidcote
a traditional
Engish lavender

Lavender for culinary use as got to be one of the most 'up and coming' herbs of the moment. It is to be found everywhere from drinks to divine tasting chocolate, from roast meats to desserts.

When using lavender for cooking it is important to use a 'culinary' lavender. Our favourite dwarf English lavender - Hidcote - is ideal for flavour and fragrance.

The french lavenders - Lavandula stoechas - have very fine flowers but a rather antiseptic scent, not ideal for eating!

The best time to pick lavender, both for using fresh in cooking or preserving and drying for the winter, is just as the first part of the bud starts to open. At this point there are maximum essential oils in the flowers to be used.

Lavender goes as well with roast lamb as the more traditional addition of rosemary.
Cut small slits or pockets all over a lamb joint and stuff each slit with a sliver of fresh garlic and a lavender head or two. Warm together a tablespoon each of lavender honey and olive oil and drizzle over the meat before roasting.

Lavender and peppercorn rub for roasted meat
3 tsp mixed peppercorns
1 tsp fennel seeds
1 tsp sea salt crystals
2 tsp dried lavender heads

Combine all the ingredients and coarsely crush in a pestle and mortar, or in a strong plastic bag with a rolling pin. Store in a small jar and use to rub onto your roasts or barbecue meats, then leave them to marinate for an hour or two to really enhance their flavours.

Try out some of the more old fashioned recipes like

Lavender Flavoured Sugar.
Dried lavender flowers are layered with sugar, in a glass jar this looks very decorative and can make a really unusual gift. Use the sugar after a month or so to make biscuits or even meringues for a especially amazing flavour.

Apple and Lavender Cocktail Apple and Lavender Cocktail
100 ml gin, vodka or white rum
Juice of a large lime
50 ml apple juice
1 tbls caster sugar
2 small handfuls of lavender flowers
Ice cubes

Bruise the lavender lightly with a rolling pin to release the essentials oils.
Combine all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker and shake for a full minute.
Strain into two chilled glasses and decorate with a couple of sprigs of lavender.

Lavender is such a traditional British fragrance, used over the centuries in a multitude of ways. It's good to see its use in cooking becoming more and more popular in such a host of very different dishes.