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Citrus Season, Zest & Herbs
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Blog Posts USA Winter

Citrus Season, Zest & Herbs

January 31, 2020

Citrus Season, Zest & Herbs

JANUARY 31st, 2020

While it’s true that my favorite season is spring due to the deluge of budding, blooming and sprouting spring herbs, peas, baby artichokes and asparagus, wintertime has some extraordinary offerings in the form of citrus that strongly excite me. Not just the fruit but the zest, which leads me on many more kitchen adventures. I’m here to remind all of the access we have these days to citrus variety and also suggest to all that they use more zest, in general and especially in the peak of winter citrus season.

Not only are we seeing produce departments stocked up with the full line up of citrus  “commodities” – lemons, limes, orange, or grapefruit, but we are seeing an extraordinary amount of specialty, nuche and heirloom varietals. California’s plethora of passionate organic citrus farmers, many with older orchards, are pushing variety and flavor over volume and homogeneity and our grocery stores and farmers markets (if you are lucky to be in California) are reaping the benefits.

Buck Brand is for me the most notable of California citrus brands and the one that gets me excited in winter time.  Buck Brand hails from Deer Creek Heights Ranch in (Terra Bella) Porterville, California. They have over 275 acres of organic heirloom specialty citrus-over 80 different varietals including many specialty and niche items. Grower Lisle Babcock is a legend in Citrus. Everything is handpicked on the ranch and this time of year all of my favorites become plentiful: heirloom navel oranges, sweet limes (musabi), finger limes, Buddhas hands, Meyer lemons, Etrog, torange ( a large non bitter lemon like fruit hailing from Iraq) and tangerines like their TDE- part Temple Orange or a Tangor (which is actually half orange and half Royal Mandarin), part Dancy Tangerine and part Party Encore Tangerine.

Not only am I eating and using all the fruit I can get my hands on from Buck Brand (and other growers) but I’m using the zest in everything I do. It’s a wonderful time to get zesty, all of the winter seasonal items seems to beg for citrus flavor and zest!

Winter Citrus Herb Salt

Makes about 2 cups

This is a super bright, bold zest forward, herbaceous salt. I put it on all my winter goods- sweet, savory and above all fresh. I like to think of my salt recipes add an exact essence of a time in the season and this one embodies citrus season. I love it on citrus, avocados, crab, salads, pasta – and even put a pinch on my cocktails and mocktails. Be creative with your zest options.

Ingredients

½ cup chopped super finely chopped parsley leaves
1 tablespoon super finely chopped mint leaves
1 tablespoon super finely chopped tarragon leaves
1 tablespoon super finely chopped chives
1 tablespoon super finely chopped fennel fronds
4 -5 nasturtium flowers, chopped fine
2-3 coriander flowers, chopped fine
1 red chili pepper, deseeded and chopped super fine
1 tablespoon lemon zest
1 tablespoon tangerine zest
2 teaspoons grapefruit zest
2 teaspoons pomelo zest
1 tablespoon Aleppo pepper
1 teaspoon crushed fennel seeds
1 ½ cups Maldon flake salt

Directions

Pre Heat oven to 200 degrees F.

In a medium mixing bowl, mix together all of the fresh herbs, flowers, zest and Aleppo pepper. Gently fold in the salt, using your fingers mix all the ingredients up, making sure there are no clumps o zest in the mix. Place the salt/herb mix on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper so that its spread out evenly across the entire sheet and flat. Place in the oven and bake for about 14 minutes or until the herbs seem to have a lot less moisture but are not totally dried. Store in a small bowl on your counter for a few weeks.

Toss the salt over fresh citrus and other winter produce items.

Fuerte or Bacon Avocado with Citrus Salt

Serves 1

Growing up as a little girl in southern California, we ate a lot of avocados. My father used to eat them with a spoon, cutting them in half and sprinkling Lawry’s garlic salt all over them. It’s a tasty way to eat avocados, sure, but it’s also a deeply nostalgic flavor for me- one that I have been trying to recreate without the use of a preservative and chemical filled season salt. My Winter Citrus and Herb Salt does just this. This is one of my favorite snacks and the best way to use up an avocado that must be eaten NOW!

Ingredients

1 avocado, cut in half, seed removed
1 teaspoon Winter Citrus Herb Salt

Directions

Sprinkle the salt all over the avocado, eat with a spoon!

Blood Orange Roasted Beets

Makes 3-4 roasted beets

No matter what I am making with roasted beets this is the recipe I start with. The combination of oranges and beets is lovely and my go to. If you are roasting different color beets, wrap them in foil separated, otherwise the colors bleed.

Ingredients

3-4 whole beets, washed and trimmed
2 tablespoon extra-virgin oil
2 teaspoons Winter Citrus Herb Salt
Zest of 1 blood orange
Juice of one blood orange

Directions

Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees F. Place a piece of tin foil down on a baking sheet and place the whole beets down in the center. Drizzle the olive oil over the top followed by the Citrus Herb Salt and zest. Squeeze the juice over them and then wrap them up tightly in the tinfoil. Bake for about 40 minutes or until the beets are soft when poked with a sharp knife.

Cool and peel. Refrigerate for up to a week.

Winter Citrus & Herb Salad

Serves 4

Ingredients

1 cara cara orange
1 blood orange
1 honey orange
1 pomelo
3-4 roasted beets: red, candy striped and orange, peeled and sliced
1 teaspoon Meyer Lemon Zest
¼ cup Castelvetrano green olives, roughly chopped
¼ cup fresh parsley leaves
1 tablespoon fresh mint leaves
Small handful of fennel fronds
2 tablespoons lemon juice
¼ cup blood orange juice
2 teaspoons champagne vinaigrette
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
1 tablespoon tahini
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon Winter Citrus Herb Salt

Directions

Prepare the citrus by slicing it into thin rounds and removing the peel with a knife, little by little. Arrange the citrus on a large platter and lay the beets around over the top. Sprinkle the zest over the top, followed by the olives and parsley, mint and fennel leaves.

Whisk the lemon and orange juice together with the vinegar, tahini and olive oil and season with ½ the Winter Citrus Herb Salt. Drizzle the dressing over the top and sprinkle the remaining ½ teaspoon of Winter Citrus Herb Salt over the top of the salad.

Pomelo Vodka with Rosemary Zest Salt

Makes a few drinks

The Buck brand Shaddock pomelo varietal is my favorite and I love drinking it. With or without vodka its extraordinary A little rosemary pomelo-zest salt on top and this is my perfect winter moment. The Bay Laurel bitters make a fantastic addition to this drink. I use Monarch Bitters brand from Petaluma.

Ingredients

1 teaspoon Maldon salt
1 teaspoon fresh rosemary
2 teaspoons pomelo zest
Juice of 2-3 pomelos
2 ounces vodka or gin (optional)
California Bay Laurel Bitters (optional)

Directions

To make the salt, mix the salt, rosemary and zest together in a small bowl.

Fill a glass with ice and if you are using booze add it to the glass, otherwise skip and simply fill the glass with juice. Lace a few drops of the Bay Laurel bitters on top followed by a pinch of the pomelo rosemary salt.

Blog Posts USA Winter

Citrus Season, Zest & Herbs

January 31, 2020
January 31, 2020
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Noted herb expert, culinary educator and recipe developer. Small business consultant traveling the globe in search of food and cultural knowledge, while working with small, local, organic, sustainable, and fairtrade farmers.

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We are back in Brooklyn. Long shit ass story filled with 48 hours of inca pain. Put him on serious pain meds and Checked ourselves into a dumbo hotel  and he is sleeping like a baby - FINALLY.  A few more vet visits this week and some tourism and fun and then we head home fucking defeated and so excited. 

Many good moments obviously - no regrets. We would not have known about his cancer if we didn't come here!
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🥭 THE CRESPO PUPPY BOWL! 🏈🐶
❤️ A GAME OF HEART, HISTORY & MANGOES!

Before the fur flies, let’s meet our players:

🏆 Inca the Old Man Pitbull – A true OG from the Bronx (like @jlo 👀), about to retire but still got the moves.

🏆 Milo & Maui, the Red-Headed Rookies – Young, fast, and full of energy.

First we pause before the game ❤️
💛 In Loving Memory – RIP Rocco 🕊️ Forever a Crespo legend.

🔥 Now THE GAME! Inca dodges like a fiberless Ataulfo, but the rookies charge forward—TOUCHDOWN! 🏆 Inca fights back with buttery finesse, but the golden duo is too quick.

🏆 FINAL SCORE: TEXAS TAKES IT!

🐱 Ref Controversy? Was Sapa the Ref bribed? #RefBias or fair game?

🥭 MANGO FACT: Dogs love mangoes! No pit, no peel—just pure #MangoJoy!

🔥 Who’s the real MVP? Drop a 🏆 for Team Mango, 🐶 for Team Inca, or 🦴 for Team Milo & Maui! @crespoorganic 

#PuppyBowl #MangoJoy #CrespoOrganic #MangoBowl #TexasTakesIt #DogsLoveMangoes
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Oops I did it again. 

It’s so good.
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When I went to pick up Inka today after a little skin cancer removal, this eastern bluebird sat on my car packing up the window despite the road being super busy and a hyper dog next to the car. This bird just sat there, looking at me and packing up the window. No if you’re like me, you believe this is a sign. Very much like the time in Brooklyn when a red cardinal came to my window every day for a week.  If he learns to pay attention and I’ll admit the past several years, I wasn’t paying as much attention as I should. The universe gives you all the signs you need. You do, unfortunately have to do a significant amount of work once you see and understand the signs.
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Peas, asparagus, spinach, young onion and mint, parsley, fennel fronds  and chives. 

For me, this is heavenly
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Calabrian Chili Mustard-Mint Chicken Schnitzel (Herbal breadcrumbs and rye flour breading - @quailandcondor pan siciliano) 

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One of my favorite herb combinations is mint and eggs. This was something  I learned in my early days working in the Middle East. 

I can’t imagine eggs without mint. Even my Brooklyn style bagel sandwiches - I add lots of mint. 

Today choosing a 3 mint combo preserving the freshness in the cheese 🧀 

Spearmint, Moroccan Mint and Cuban Mint
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Spring 2026
Power vs. Force — The Righteous Emergence Collection

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Awakening | Aligned | Opening | Surging | Verdant | Generative | Collective | Interconnected

Power vs. Force — The Righteous Emergence Collection is spring power. These eight salts and a bonus confectionery sugar are a mirror of spring’s righteous emergence happening in my Healdsburg, California herb garden — and a deeper exploration of power in a world currently saturated in force. This collection copiously shares the garden’s potency and sharpness at every angle — green garlic surging, sweet peas deceptively vigorous, chive blossoms popping, spearmint electric. Erupting, vigorous spring soft-stemmed herbs cut into large, jagged renditions are unapologetic in their strength and textured demeanor.  Parsley, mint, chives and cilantro are used excessively. Whole plant use discovers new powers in pollen, stems, flowers, seeds, shells, and pith — together an orchestra of energy. Winter herbs in their spring peak offer power in softer, fresher versions — rosemary lighter and more perfumed, sage greener and less pungent, marjoram less sultry in youth. These salts are denser, more potent, and brighter than any collection to date; verdant and collective in nature — accessible to anyone willing to cook with the full force of spring.

A special shout out to @valeriageorginags - who makes any of my reels that are any good.
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I was born in spring. I am spring power. Each spring I surge. This collection is a result of all surging prior and a reminder to live, lead and love with righteous power —like spring, especially in a world overrun by force……..It’s Aries season. 

The spring herbal salt collection is now live and ready to come into your kitchen or just into your creativity when peruse. 

www.Shop.Herbal-Roots.com

Spring 2026
Power vs. Force — The Righteous Emergence Collection

Awakening | Aligned | Opening | Surging | Verdant | Generative | Collective | Interconnected

I’ll be posting here and on #tiktok  more about each salt over the new few days. It’s fun and these salts are some of my best yet.
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One little magnolia tree in my garden inspired this powerful and experimental offering. Magnolia petals taste of spicy floral, with a lot of ginger notes, tiny nuances of cardamom, clove, and even  citrus. I thought they be perfect melded into one of my custom chais spice mixes and I get worried experimenting with pearl sugar as I had an idea I wanted to put this atop strawberry scones. Sugar, as I have learned, in past experiments is unforgiving so this has evolved as everything I thought or wanted to happen did not. Like most my experiments it sticks the eventual and surprising landing. 

The new collection comes out next week - and the other 7 offerings are salts. 

The collection exploration is about power. Something my Aries self has been exploring since birth. 

Spring 2026
Power vs. Force — The Righteous Emergence Collection

Awakening | Aligned | Opening | Surging | Verdant | Generative | Collective | Interconnected

Rhubarb Spiced Chai
Magnolia Salty-Sugar

Fresh Herbs: Lavender, Pink Dianthus, Purple Sage, Strawberry Geranium, Pineapple 
Sage, Moroccan Mint, Wild Violets, Tarragon, Rosemary Produce: Ginger, Strawberries, 
Rhubarb, Citrus & Peach Blossoms Spices: Vanilla, Cinnamon Green & Black Cardamon, 
All Spice, Mace, Black & White Peppercorn, Litsea Berries, Pollen Citrus Zest: Lemon and 
Orange Zest Other: Magnolia Flowers, Maldon Salt, Pearl Sugar
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Remember my Winter-Sweet Chrysophoeia Salt I made for @loandbeholdhealdsburg ? Well it ended up on the new menu on a lick and sip spring adventure crafted by @jeffrey_david_henrie 

The Alchemist
 @newalchemydistilling Arborist Gin, green apple, lemon arugula, celery, hops 

It’s everything I dreamed it would be!!
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The Verdant(ce)

Gin 
Dry Vermouth 
(Wish I had green chartreuse in hand!)

I also am out of sugar so I made a simple syrup using powdered sugar (honestly I’m now obsessed)

Celrey leaves, parsley, Moroccan  mint, spearmint, black lime, peach blossoms rose water, tiny bit of Vietnamese litsea berry 

Lemon and lime 
Soda water 

If you know me you know I’m obsessed with celery juice in cocktails / star fruit celery gimlet my absolute fav.
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Special project for @loandbeholdhealdsburg  by @myherbalroots 

Winter-Sweet
Herbal Chrysopoeia Salt 


Fresh Herbs: Fennel Fronds, Parsley, Celery Leaf, Wild Arugula, Coriander, Red Dandelion, Calendula Petals, Violets Produce:  Whole Lemons & Tango Tangerines, Turnip Greens, Carrot Tops, Spigarello Broccoli Greens Spices: Sumac, Purple Shallow Powder, Fermented White Peppercorns, Yellow Mustard Seed, Fennel Seed, Juniper Berries  Citrus Zest: Lemon Zest Other: Maldon Salt

Description
Chrysopoeia is the ancient alchemical act of turning base matter into gold. A hard freeze did exactly that in my garden — starches converting to sugar, and what was bitter and stubborn became something unexpectedly sweet and concentrated. This bright, herbaceous salt is the result of that cold snap. Carrot tops, turnip greens, and spigarello yield earthy, subterranean, dug-up flavor — the depth before light, on the way to bright. Frost-kissed red dandelion, bolted wild arugula, and coriander display pleasant bitterness, minerality, and sharpness as they move from cold into early spring sun. Celery leaf reedy and clean. Parsley the green electricity, dancing with whole bright lemons and spicy Tango tangerines — slurried like hail and slushed into the salt. Calendula petals lend a buttery, faintly resinous warmth while violets flicker color like dancing light off frost. A subtle mix of spice keeps this citrus-forward salt firmly on the savory side. Sumac offers a minuscule tinge of tart. Fermented white peppercorns heat like our warmer pre-spring days. Juniper adds a quiet forested depth beneath everything. Yellow mustard and fennel seed swirl in further complexity — the savory undercurrent that keeps the brightness honest. All of it engulfed in winter-sweet fennel fronds threading anise freshness throughout. The result is urgent, alive, bright winter/spring herbaceousness. It tastes of the cusp we lie on.

Unlike the fraudulent practitioners who chased chrysopoeia for wealth, this salt returns to the ancient truth at its heart — the gold was never the goal. It was the practice. 

This  is my herbal alchemy.
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Lemony Rosemary White Beans and Broccoli & a Fried Egg
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I’m making my Passion Fruit Pork Mole this year - but regardless what the “flavor is” I love making Christmas Mole and Tamales… 

Link in my story for my Mango version, which I think is amazing. Mole and tamales are a fun project for a full house and feeds en masse. 

A reminder that a long list of ingredients isn’t a bad thing- especially for those of you who have spice stocked kitchens which you all should! (@curiospice has last minute sales I’m sure for gifting yourself or loved ones if your kitchen isn’t stocked)
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