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Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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The Licorice Root Extract is obtained by pounding the root of the plant,
boiling it in water, then evaporating the liquid. Partial evaporation results in a syrup; further evaporation results in a gold-brown crystalline powder. The licorice powder is 50 times sweeter than sugar. -- Nick, KI6VAV. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families: https://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/ Thank a Veteran! Support Our Troops: http://anymarine.com/ You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ USMC 1365061 |
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Nick Cramer wrote:
> The Licorice Root Extract is obtained by pounding the root of the plant, > boiling it in water, then evaporating the liquid. Partial evaporation > results in a syrup; further evaporation results in a gold-brown crystalline > powder. The licorice powder is 50 times sweeter than sugar. > Aha! The Thai way - pounding the root! I never thought of that. It will open up the pulp better than any other way. I got two packets of the roots, so I'll try this with one of them. I'm thinking I might use it as a partial sweetener in sweet & sour dishes, and maybe in Phad Thai. Thanks, Ian |
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" > wrote:
> Nick Cramer wrote: > > The Licorice Root Extract is obtained by pounding the root of the > > plant, boiling it in water, then evaporating the liquid. Partial > > evaporation results in a syrup; further evaporation results in a > > gold-brown crystalline powder. The licorice powder is 50 times sweeter > > than sugar. > Aha! The Thai way - pounding the root! I never thought of that. It will > open up the pulp better than any other way. Absolutely! Using a blender or food processor mostly slices the food, however finely. Jun uses a mortar and pestle almost exclusively. > I got two packets of the roots, so I'll try this with one of them. I'm > thinking I might use it as a partial sweetener in sweet & sour dishes, > and maybe in Phad Thai. Heh heh! Let me know how that Licorice Pad Thai turns out. I don't think I've ever seen Jun use licorice! BTW Licorice is also soluble in alcohol. I don't like Anisette and I'd have to build a 'still to capture the evaporated liquid. So, that's out for me! -- Nick, KI6VAV. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families: https://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/ Thank a Veteran! Support Our Troops: http://anymarine.com/ You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ USMC 1365061 |
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Nick Cramer wrote:
> " > wrote: >> Nick Cramer wrote: >>> The Licorice Root Extract is obtained by pounding the root of the >>> plant, boiling it in water, then evaporating the liquid. Partial >>> evaporation results in a syrup; further evaporation results in a >>> gold-brown crystalline powder. The licorice powder is 50 times sweeter >>> than sugar. > >> Aha! The Thai way - pounding the root! I never thought of that. It will >> open up the pulp better than any other way. > > Absolutely! Using a blender or food processor mostly slices the food, > however finely. Jun uses a mortar and pestle almost exclusively. > >> I got two packets of the roots, so I'll try this with one of them. I'm >> thinking I might use it as a partial sweetener in sweet & sour dishes, >> and maybe in Phad Thai. > > Heh heh! Let me know how that Licorice Pad Thai turns out. I don't think > I've ever seen Jun use licorice! > > BTW Licorice is also soluble in alcohol. I don't like Anisette and I'd have > to build a 'still to capture the evaporated liquid. So, that's out for me! > I used a little powdered licorice in a *******ized version of the recipe I originally bought the stuff for, and the taste was Ok - the licorice blended in and was not clearly noticeable unless you knew. Thats the effect I'd want in the Phad Thai - just one note among many. I'll let you know what happens. Cheers, Ian |
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