Lilies, laughter and other lovely things
creativeinspiration:

“BRAMBLE JELLY SHOTS (with apologies to Dick Bradsell)
For the float:
6 ounces crème de mûre (blackberry liqueur) 7 grams (1 packet) Knox unflavored gelatin 1 package (3 ounces) grape-flavored Jell-O gelatin 1 cup hot water
In a small mixing bowl, sprinkle the Knox and the Jell-O into the hot  water and stir until completely dissolved, 5 to 7 minutes. Let sit for 5  minutes, then stir in the crème de mûre. In a small, nonreactive baking  dish or loaf pan, pour a few drops of cooking oil (grapeseed works  well) and wipe out with a paper towel, coating the entire vessel with  the barest layer. Pour blackberry float mixture in and set to chill in  refrigerator for at least 2 hours and up to overnight, making certain it  is level.
For the gin sour:
1 cup gin (lemon infused) 2/3 cup fresh lemon juice 1/2 cup sugar 28 grams (4 packets) Knox unflavored gelatin 1 cup hot water.
Juice enough lemons to give you 2/3 cup juice, keeping the hulls as  you squeeze. Roughly chop the squeezed hulls and put them in a coverable  container along with the gin and the lemon juice. Leave at room  temperature for at least 2 hours. It’s a good idea to do this before  starting the float, so that by the time that has firmed up, your  infusion is ready to go. When the float layer is firm, bloom the gelatin  in the hot water by sprinkling it slowly while stirring, and continuing  stirring until fully dissolved. Add the sugar and stir until that is  also fully dissolved. Strain the gin mixture off from the lemon hulls  through a fine sieve or chinoise and add it into the gelatin mixture,  stirring well. Over a spoon, so as not to gouge a divot in the float  layer, pour the lemon sour mix onto the float layer and return to  refrigerator, again checking for levelness. Chill overnight. When ready  to serve, cut into squares, or use a cookie cutter for shapes, and pull  up carefully, using a cake spatula to get under the float layer. Garnish  with a blackberry and/or a thin wedge of candied lemon. Or simply  slurp.”
Via New York Times
Pretty Jello-Shot!!

creativeinspiration:

“BRAMBLE JELLY SHOTS (with apologies to Dick Bradsell)

For the float:

6 ounces crème de mûre (blackberry liqueur)
7 grams (1 packet) Knox unflavored gelatin
1 package (3 ounces) grape-flavored Jell-O gelatin
1 cup hot water

In a small mixing bowl, sprinkle the Knox and the Jell-O into the hot water and stir until completely dissolved, 5 to 7 minutes. Let sit for 5 minutes, then stir in the crème de mûre. In a small, nonreactive baking dish or loaf pan, pour a few drops of cooking oil (grapeseed works well) and wipe out with a paper towel, coating the entire vessel with the barest layer. Pour blackberry float mixture in and set to chill in refrigerator for at least 2 hours and up to overnight, making certain it is level.

For the gin sour:

1 cup gin (lemon infused)
2/3 cup fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup sugar
28 grams (4 packets) Knox unflavored gelatin
1 cup hot water.

Juice enough lemons to give you 2/3 cup juice, keeping the hulls as you squeeze. Roughly chop the squeezed hulls and put them in a coverable container along with the gin and the lemon juice. Leave at room temperature for at least 2 hours. It’s a good idea to do this before starting the float, so that by the time that has firmed up, your infusion is ready to go. When the float layer is firm, bloom the gelatin in the hot water by sprinkling it slowly while stirring, and continuing stirring until fully dissolved. Add the sugar and stir until that is also fully dissolved. Strain the gin mixture off from the lemon hulls through a fine sieve or chinoise and add it into the gelatin mixture, stirring well. Over a spoon, so as not to gouge a divot in the float layer, pour the lemon sour mix onto the float layer and return to refrigerator, again checking for levelness. Chill overnight. When ready to serve, cut into squares, or use a cookie cutter for shapes, and pull up carefully, using a cake spatula to get under the float layer. Garnish with a blackberry and/or a thin wedge of candied lemon. Or simply slurp.”

Via New York Times

Pretty Jello-Shot!!

  1. 072106 reblogged this from lilieslaughsandlovelythings
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  4. jackiekdo reblogged this from heather-in-heels and added:
    When was the last time you had jell-o?
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  9. abutterscotchsundae reblogged this from creativeinspiration and added:
    Bramble jelly shots. See
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  13. michelleeemabelle reblogged this from creativeinspiration and added:
    prettiest jello shot i’ve ever seen.
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