How to Make Flavored Sugars

Sarah MickeyAll Recipes, Citrus Fruit Recipes, Culinary Tips & Techniques, Dessert Techniques, Food Gift Ideas, Lavender Recipes, Sweetener Recipes, Vanilla Recipes 5 Comments

How to Make Flavored Sugars

Flavored sugars are incredibly easy to make and can be used as an ingredient in desserts and beverages, served to the side of coffee and tea, used to rim cocktail glasses, or sprinkled over the top of completed desserts just before serving. All you need is some sugar (we recommend superfine sugar) a coffee or spice grinder, and your flavoring ingredient.

We’ve included several recipes below, but you could use almost any dry grindable ingredient (whole spices, dried herbs, citrus zest, chilies, other sweeteners like maple sugar, etc).

Start with one tablespoon of sugar, and some of your flavor ingredient, and increase one or the other as needed to get the balance you want (blending before each taste). You can even try blending flavors! The finished sugar will have a consistency somewhat similar to powdered sugar.

Flavored Sugar

Flavored Sugar Recipes We Like:

INGREDIENTS
  • Lavender Sugar:
  • Grind ½ tsp Dried Lavender Buds along with 4 tbsp of sugar.
  • Chile Sugar:
  • Remove the stems and seeds from half of a Dried Aji Panca Chile. Grind it with 2 tbsp of sugar.

Variations: Try any other dried mild chilies, tweaking the amount of sugar as necessary.

  • Cardamom Sugar:
  • Crack and empty enough whole cardamom pods to gather ¼ tsp of seeds. Grind them with 3 tbsp of sugar.
  • Lime Sugar:
  • Zest of 1 Lime
  • 2 tbsp Sugar

Variations: Substitute zest from a different citrus fruit, such as lemon, orange, or Buddha hand. Use this technique with leftover hard candied citrus zest, just skip to step 7 in the Lime Sugar directions and use
less sugar.

  • Ground Vanilla Sugar:
  • 2 Vanilla Beans (Bourbon Vanilla Beans or Tahitian Vanilla Beans)
  • 2 tbsp Sugar
  • Candy-Cap Sugar:
  • 1/4th of a cup of dried candy cap mushrooms
  • 1 tbsp Sugar
  • Hibiscus Sugar:
  • 2 tbsp crushed Dried Hibiscus Blossoms
  • 2 tbsp Granulated Sugar

DIRECTIONS

    • Lavender Sugar

Lavender Sugar

    • Chile Sugar

Chile Sugar

    • Cardamom Sugar

Cardamom Sugar

    • Lime Sugar

Lime Sugar

1

Preheat your oven or toaster oven to 225 degrees.

2

Using a vegetable peeler, remove the zest of one lime in large strips.

3

Use the point of a knife blade to scrape the white pith off the inside of the rind.

4

Slice the rind into thin strips. Spread them out on parchment paper on a baking sheet.

5

Place the zest in the oven, and bake for 5 minutes. Check the zest. Any pieces that are completely stiff and dried out are done. Remove them from the oven before the zest scorches.

6

Continue to bake the rest of the zest, checking every few minutes, until all of it is dry. Discard any strips that have browned, as they will be excessively bitter.

7

Grind sugar and lime zest together. Taste, and add more sugar if you feel it’s too strong.

  • Ground Vanilla Sugar

1

Leave the vanilla beans out on your counter, uncovered, until they are completely dried out and snap without bending (how long this takes depends on your climate and how old the beans are…but expect it to take a couple of days).

2

Snap the beans in halves or quarters and grind them with the sugar.

Ground Vanilla Sugar

Candy-Cap Sugar

1

This sugar really shows off the maple-like flavor of raw candy-cap mushrooms. Just grind 1/4th of a cup of dried candy cap mushrooms with 1 tbsp of sugar.

 

Comments 5

  1. Pingback: Quick & Easy Gifts from Your Kitchen: - Condiment Gifts for Christmas, Birthday, Anytime

  2. Hi Feather,

    To make raspberry sugar we’d first dehydrate raspberries (you may be able to shortcut this by buying freeze-dried raspberries at the grocery store) then grind them in a clean coffee/spice grinder with sugar. I’ve used this technique (without the sugar) to make raspberry powder in the past. The powder has a beautiful color, but its flavor is much more muted than fresh raspberries.

    Presumably you can do the same thing with watermelon, but I can’t speak from experience.

    Matthew
    Marxfoods.com

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