Chile Berry Cooler Recipe

I will spare you all of the  metaphors and analogies about how hot it is outside. No matter what part of the country you are in right now, you can just stick your head outside and feel it for yourself, so no need for me to elaborate.

One of the casualties created by summer is often my time in the kitchen. As much as I would love to stand in my non-air conditioned kitchen with the stove or oven pumping even more heat out….I’ll pass. So, when Marx Foods issued a blog recipe contest, my initial thought was forget it! But then I read it a little more closely and realized that a) the recipe involved chile peppers and b) they were looking for cold recipes…well heck yeah I threw my hat in the ring!

Pequin peppers rehydrating

My love of all things spicy is well documented. So when I received a package stuffed with dried smoked serrano, pequin, habanero, ancho, guajillo, cascabel and japones chiles it felt like it was my birthday.

Adding the spicy sugar rim

I have several cold recipes planned for these chiles. But today’s recipe for the Chile Berry Cooler is undoubtedly the chilliest (pun intended). The first step in the recipe is to make the spicy simple syrup. You will have left over syrup to get creative with. Add it to teas, berries…anything!

Spicy Mint Simple Syrup

 Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 3/4 cup water
  • 10 rehydrated pequin peppers
  • 1 Tbsp dried mint

Directions:

  • Add all ingredients to a small pot and heat to a boil over medium heat, stirring constantly
  • Continue to boil for 2 minutes, or until sugar has evaporated
  • Place a mesh strainer over a glass container and pour the mixture through the strainer into the glass
  • Use a fork to press the remnants into the mesh in order to squeeze out the flavor
  • Allow simple syrup to cool
  • Store in the refrigerator
  • Makes 1 cup of simple syrup

Chile Berry Cooler Recipe

Ingredients:

  • 10 fresh bing cherries (seeds and stems removed)
  • 6 large strawberries (husked and quartered)
  • 1/4 cup spicy mint simple syrup (recipe above)
  • Ice
  • Your choice of seltzer water, lemon-lime soda, ginger ale or prosecco
  • 1/8 cup super fine sugar
  • 2 dried pequin peppers (crushed)
  • 1 wedge of lime

Directions:

    • Place cherries, strawberries and syrup into a blended and blend until smooth
    • On a plate the same width as the glass you will be using, mix together the super fine sugar and crushed peppers
    • Run the lime wedge around the rim of your glass, making sure the entire rim is covered
    • Place the glass, rim side down, into the sugar mixture and spin it to make sure the entire rim gets covered in the sugar mixture
    • Fill the glass with ice, making sure not to knock off the spicy sugar rim
    • Add 1/8 cup of the berry mixture (you may want to add more after you try it)
    • Fill your glass with the liquid of your choice
    • Garnish with limes, strawberries and/or cherries
    • Make sure to take your first sips from the glass getting a nice mounthful of the delicious spicy sugar rim!

Disclaimer: I received the chiles for this recipe free of charge as a part of the Fire on Ice Chile Recipe Contest by Marx Foods.

Our Favorite Annual Work Event: Dinner at the Blue Room!

One of my favorite parts of my job is organizing a social event every semester. Some of you may know that I have an Event Marketing background, and planning events is the one thing I miss more than anything! So once a semester, I get to do my thing!

I have changed a lot of the events that had become a tradition for our office. But the one that has remained the same is our November dinner at the Blue Room in Kendall Square. For the past 2 years I have worked with Lindsay and Robin, who are great! They are very accommodating in planning the menu and always do a great job pairing wines. In case you didn’t know, wine is kind-of their thing!

So Lara and I arrived about an hour early to make sure all is good. The room was set up beautifully, and I immediately was enamoured with the painting of Burt Reynolds on the back wall. Don’t ask me why, I just was.

So Lara and I had a drink and waited for the rest of the crowd.

The group started flooding in and the waitstaff did an amazing job of making sure everyone was taken care of. After 45 minutes of mingling, it was time to take our seats and let the feast begin!

First on the menu were the appetizers:  local farmer vegetable antipasto with crispy flatbread, gougères with Tuscan butter and cheese goat cheese & black pepper caramel, wood grilled pizza with roasted pear, mascarpone & walnuts. Come to think of it, there was no flatbread with the antipasto, but there was a fabulous rustic loaf.

Next up was the local apple, VT cheddar and toasted pecan salad. Meh. I wouldn’t order this salad again. The apple was good, but there was too much endive (that is what we think it was). And now that I type this, I don’t remember there being any cheddar on the salad. I also only tasted salt and pepper, not much of a dressing. That was all okay though, because the main course was on the way!

One of the great things about working with a good friend and fellow foodie is that you can share food! So, as we always do, Lara and I ordered two different meals to split. We chose the grilled skirt steak with harissa, cous-cous, mint and watercress salad and the hubbard squash gnocchi with tuscan kale, lentils, thyme brown butter sauce with parmigiano reggiano.

I was surprised by the look of the vegetarian meal. The gnocchi were more dumpling like than gnocchi, per-say. And on top of the lentils it took on a strange look. But none of that mattered when I took a bite, it was delicious, and matched perfectly with the lentils!

The skirt steak was cooked perfectly, pink in the middle with a nice char on the outside. Every bite of this meal was more delicious than the next!

The sad truth, that I was completely stuffed, was revealed to me when the pumpkin spice cake with rum raisin caramel was served. The caramel was SERIOUS! Unfortunately I was too stuffed to scoff down the whole dessert!

The added bonus, dinner was on work! Nothing beats a delicious meal that you don’t have to pay for! I don’t make it to the blue room very often. Maybe once a year for brunch, once for lunch on the patio, and once for our work event. But I look forward to it every single time. Hmm, maybe this is a good idea for an upcoming Boston Brunchers event….Let the planning continue!

A special thank you to my assistant photographer Lara for her great work on me and Burt, my favorite picture of the drink menu, and the artistic view of the skirt steak!

Blue Room on Urbanspoon
See my favorite dishes at this restaurant on Tasted Menu

  • Foodbuzz
  • Quantcast
  • Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

    Join 2,948 other followers