Pear–Ginseng Spice Concentrate (Zero-Caffeine)

A silky, pear-forward concentrate built from Asian pear blended with a mild ginseng infusion and just a whisper of warm baking spice. Steeping the dried ginseng first keeps the flavor clean and avoids bitterness, while straining gives a glossy, nectar-like texture that mixes beautifully with sparkling water or still water. It’s refreshing served cold, but also cozy warmed gently on the stove.

Total time: 25 minutes

Yield: Makes about 2–3 cups concentrate

Ingredients

  • 2 Asian pears, cored (peel optional; peel if your blender leaves grit)
  • 1 cup hot water (not boiling)
  • Dried ginseng root: 2–4 thin slices or a 1–2 inch piece (about 2–3 g)
  • Ground nutmeg: 1/8 tsp (small pinch)
  • Ground clove: 1/16 tsp (very small pinch)
  • Pinch of fine salt
  • 1–3 tbsp sugar or honey (optional, to taste)

Instructions

  1. Add the dried ginseng root to a mug or heatproof measuring cup and pour over 1 cup hot water (aim for steaming-hot, not a hard boil).
  2. Steep 10–15 minutes, tasting at 10 minutes. You’re looking for a gentle herbal, slightly bitter-sweet note—not medicinally strong.
  3. Remove the ginseng root and let the infusion cool to room temp (or chill briefly).
  4. Add the cored pears to a high-speed blender.
  5. Pour in the cooled ginseng infusion, then add nutmeg, clove, and a pinch of salt.
  6. Blend on high until completely silky and slightly foamy, 30–60 seconds. It should look glossy with no visible grit.
  7. Pour through a fine-mesh strainer (or nut-milk bag) into a jar.
  8. Press or squeeze firmly to extract the glossy liquid; discard (or snack on) the remaining pulp.
  9. Taste the concentrate straight. The aroma should read as ripe pear first, with spice in the background.
  10. If it tastes flat, add another tiny pinch of salt and blend/stir.
  11. If it’s too clove-forward, dilute with a splash of water (or blend in another pear if you have one).
  12. If it finishes too dry, sweeten with 1–3 tbsp sugar or honey, blending/stirring to dissolve.
  13. For a soda: mix 1 part concentrate with 2–3 parts cold sparkling water over ice.
  14. For a still “tea”: mix 1 part concentrate with 3 parts cold water.
  15. For a warm drink: heat gently until steaming (don’t boil), then serve.

Notes

Ginseng strength varies by type and age; steep time controls bitterness. Start with the smaller amount and extend steeping only if you want a more pronounced herbal note. Storage: Refrigerate concentrate in a sealed jar 3–4 days. Shake before using; natural settling is normal. Substitutions: If you only have regular pears, use 2 ripe Bartlett/Anjou and consider peeling for a smoother texture. Scaling: This doubles well—keep spice increases modest (don’t double clove unless you’re sure you want it).