This one’s super-special, you guys, and I’m really excited to be sharing this with you. Honeysuckle has long been my absolute favorite flower, thanks to its sultry, heady fragrance. Because it blooms, in my hometown, from late April and into June, it reminds me of walking out on humid nights, adolescent longing, and the sweet promise of the long summer ahead.

It was in high school, a few days after having made wreaths of it to decorate my friends’ doors for May Day, when I first discovered its culinary application. We’d gone to the just-opened paletería, which was offering Honeysuckle paletas.
Friends, it was a revelation.
“How do you do this?” I asked the proprietress. “How do you make a flower a taste!?” I had to have more.
“I pay some neighborhood kids to pick me bucketfuls of blossoms,” she said. “All you do is pour cold water over them, let them sit overnight, and that’s your infusion. Add simple syrup, freeze it, and there you go.”

Zac and I went out a few days later and picked a bucketful. But because it was the end of the school year, and, thus, exam time, we forgot about it, and the project really didn’t go anywhere.
It wasn’t until a few years ago that we tried it again– this time with the benefit of actually having a kitchen– and it’s been one of our seasonal favorites ever since.
First, you pick as much honeysuckle as you can find. Then, pick off all the blossoms, and place them in a nonreactive container:

We ended up with 23 grams worth. Although that doesn’t seem like much, the blossoms are so powerfully fragrant that they provide more than enough flavor.

Next, pour 4 cups of cold water over your blossoms. If you need a weight– such as a plate, or another bowl– to keep them underwater, then add one. Let the blossoms steep overnight.
The next day, strain them. You’ll end up with 4 cups of a delicious-smelling, light amber liquid.

Add 1 cup of simple syrup, and either 1) pour the mixture into your ice cream maker, and, done! or, 2) if you don’t have an ice cream maker, pour the mixture into a glass baking dish, and put the whole thing in the freezer.

Fish it out a hour later and smash up the crystals with a fork– repeat until your sorbet is finely-textured and thoroughly frozen.

Enjoy! I really like it with a little mint, but I bet it would go really well with prosecco, or, as NPR suggests, a thimblefull of Saute-Buissons.

Recipe:
1 oz Honeysuckle flowers
4 cups of water
1 cup sugar
1 cup of water
After collecting honeysuckle vine, remove the flowers and weigh them. Remember to remove all of the green parts from the base of the flower as well. Place the flowers in 4 cups of water and weigh them down so that they are submerged. Refrigerate the flowers and water for at least 12 hours. After the flowers have been in the water for at least 12 hours, make a simple syrup combining one cup of water with one cup of sugar. Heat this mixture until the sugar is completely dissolved. While the simple syrup is heating, strain out the flowers and pour the infused liquid into a large casserole dish. Pour the simple syrup in once the sugar has dissolved and put the casserole into the freezer. Leave in the freezer for 1 hour and then stir the liquid as crystals begin to form. Continue checking and stirring every hour until the desired consistency has been achieved. The sorbet can then be transferred to a covered container and kept in the freezer until ready to be served.


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