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