By Renee Shelton
Green food coloring is important in confectionery work, as with all the other colorings. There were many different ways to make a green food coloring using vegetables and other ingredients. These authentic food color recipes come from The Complete Confectioner, Pastry-Cook and Baker, published in 1864.
This is prepared from the fruit of the buckthorn, and is purgative.
This is perfectly harmless and will answer most purposes. Wash and drain a sufficient quantity of spinach, pound it well in a mortar, and squeeze the pounded leaves in a coarse cloth to extract all the juice; put it in a pan and set it on a good fire, and stir it occasionally until it curdles, which will be when it is at the boiling point; then take it off and strain off the water with a fine sieve; the residue left is the green; dry it and rub it through a lawn sieve. This is only fit for opaque bodies, such a ices, creams, or syrups.
Another green color is made with a mixture of saffron or gamboge, and prepared indigo; the lighter green the more yellow must be used.
Sources:
Parkinson. The Complete Confectioner, Pastry-Cook, and Baker. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1864.
This article was first published on oldschoolpastry.pastrysampler.com on February 14, 2011. It was updated on September 30, 2020.
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