5 Fresh Tarragon Leaves
1 inch Slice of Cucumber
3/4 ounce Fresh Lime Juice
1/2 ounce simple syrup
1 ounce Chilled Strong Brewed Chamomile Tea
1/2 ounce Sparkling Water
Ice
Tools: mixing glass, muddler, strainer
Glass: tumbler
Garnish: sprig of tarragon # Place taragon leaves in a shaker # Fill shaker with ice # Cut cucumber into cubes # Take a pestal and muddle all three in shaker, be sure to break up cucumber and tarragon well while crushing the ice # Add simple syrup, lime juice and strong, chilled chamomile tea to mixture # Place shake well # Strain mixture into an Old Fashioned glass filled with ice # Top drink with sparkling water # Garnish glass with round slice of cucumber
Tarragon in Tagalog is called "tarragon." The Filipino language does not have a specific term for this herb.
Tarragon is called "तारखा" (tarakha) in Hindi.
Tarragon in Tamil is commonly known as "தாக்கீர இலை" (Thaakkeer ilai).
Tarragon Corporation (tarragoncorp.com) and the answer is tarragon ;-)
Trouble on Tarragon Island was created in 2005.
there isn't one as tarragon is such a subtle flavour
In most cases there is an ounce of tarragon in bunch. You can usually find between 45-48 sprigs in one bunch of tarragon.
Bearnaise is a derivative of Hollandaise sauce. Bearnaise itself is flavored with tarragon but it doesn't have shallots like Hollandaise does.
Tarragon is a small, shrubby herb that is a member of the sunflower family. The Russian tarragon is bitter-tasting while its French counterpart is a little sweeter.
Yes, you can. Tarragon is commonly used in spaghetti sauce.
Tarragon can be substituted for anise seed. Another substitute can be fennel seed. Try a pinch of crushed fennel or anise seed as a substitute for a teaspoon of tarragon.
Yes, you can add tarragon to an egg salad. You should add it sparingly, to taste.