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Tea

Why You Should Be Drinking Turmeric

Steeped in this creamy and spiced warm drink, turmeric is the perfect accompaniment to a cozy night in.

How to Make the Easiest Two Ingredient Dessert Even Better

The Italians love their affogato—hot espresso poured over creamy ice cream—because, well, it's delicious. But we found that where delicious lurks, there's even more deliciousness to be found.

How to Find Your Perfect Cup of Tea

Tea is good for you and delicious, too. Here's how to get into tea.

This Cocktail Has A Secret

This month's House Cocktail is a welcome twist on the Hot Toddy, our go-to winter drink.

The Maple-Ginger Hot Toddy

Brewed tea is an easy way to infuse complex flavors into warming winter cocktails like this one.

Chamomile Panna Cotta With Quince

If quinces are unavailable or you want a shortcut, purchase quince paste at a specialty shop and heat it slowly to create a syrup, then simply spoon it over the custards.

Green Tea Cheesecake

We drink green tea all the time, at home or in restaurants, and it is an essential part of the Japanese culture. Matcha is a type of green tea often used in the formal tea ceremony, but it is also used in a number of Japanese desserts. It doesn't give a strong tea flavour but creates a nice colour and slight dry tartness at the end of the palate. This cake is very light and refreshing compared to many New York- style cheesecakes.

7 Homemade Ice Pops That Go Beyond Juice

It's time to break out that ice pop mold.

Earl Grey Tea Ice Cream

When we added Earl Grey ice cream to our trucks' offerings in 2009, New Yorkers went mad for it. Not surprisingly—black tea, combined with bergamot oil, cuts through the summer heat about as well as anything. We use a high-quality loose tea from our favorite tea brand, Rishi, which uses pure Italian bergamot citrus oil (and not bergamot flavoring), to make the most intensely fragrant Earl Grey tea ice cream.

Thousand Flavor Syrup

A thousand might be an exaggeration, but this complex syrup can be used many ways. Add to spritzers, drizzle over fruit, mix into yogurt, or spoon onto grapefruit halves (to name just a few).

The Iced Tea You'll Be Sipping All Summer Long

Because summer isn't going to cool down itself.

Green Tea And Ginger Beer Float

Chill glasses in the freezer for 5–10 minutes to keep the ice cream from melting into the ginger beer too quickly.

Green Goddess Cocktail

No need to buy preflavored vodka; we got great results making our own.

You Can Make This Herbal Tea from Anything

Defrost with endless cups of DIY tea, made from whatever you have in your kitchen.

Buckwheat Shortcakes with Earl-Grey Apricot Compote and Whipped Cream

Here at Epicurious, we're big fans of the nutty, fruity buckwheat-biscuit shortcakes in Alice Medrich's cookbook, Pure Desserts. So we created a version we can enjoy all year long. Cooking dried apricots in Earl Grey tea with a vanilla bean infuses them with sweet spices that pair nicely with the earthy bitterness of buckwheat flour. Don't forget to freeze the butter for 1 hour before grating.

Spinach-Avocado Smoothie with Grapefruit

The classic combination of spinach, avocado, and grapefruit inspired this fresh, vitamin-packed smoothie. With green tea and protein powder, it’s all you need to get going in the morning.

Tea-Brined Buttermilk Fried Chicken and Gravy

I've worked on my fried chicken for many years, researching every recipe that I could lay my hands on, from early antebellum instructions to the Kentucky Colonel's secret technique. This recipe uses five fats, and each one contributes to the flavor of the result. To do the chicken right, you need an old black cast-iron skillet with a lid. Sure, you can make it in a deep fryer (like we do at the restaurant), but I prefer the old-fashioned way, which is nearly impossible to pull off in a restaurant. The skillets take up so much stove space that you can't make more than ten orders at a time. So this isn't the fried chicken you're going to eat at Husk. This is the way grandmas cook fried chicken in the South, and it's the way everyone should be making fried chicken at home. This recipe takes a lot of time and attention, way more than most conventional approaches (the chicken must be brined for 12 hours, so plan ahead). But it's good. Be sure to ask your butcher for the chicken skins to render for fat and to save the cooking fat, which makes mighty fine gravy. I've thrown that recipe in here too, to complete the meal just like my grandma would have.