How much dried lemon zest to substitute for "zest of one lemon"?
Most recipes that use lemon zest call for "zest of one lemon" or some such amount. To avoid the bother of organic lemons that invariably go bad before I use them and having to fiddle with zesting I'd like to use dried zest soaked in lemon juice instead.
How should I substitute the amounts? I'm guesstimating that drying would reduce the volume by about half, but how much good fresh zest is there on a lemon in the first place?
Best Answer
Use one teaspoon of dried zest for one tablespoon of fresh zest, which is about what you get from a lemon.
Most foods dry to about a third their original size, so I would use one third of the amount called for. Lemons vary a great deal in size, but the recipe probably means one tablespoon of fresh zest, which is normal for "medium" sized lemons.
Something to watch out for is that most cheap "dried lemon peel" products are actually made from the zest and a bit of the pith, which will both give you a bitter flavor and short you some of the lemon flavor you expect. Look closely at the zest you buy, if you can see that the individual pieces have two distinct layers, or a pale yellow or white color, steer clear of that brand. This is probably a "get what you pay for" situation, so spring for the higher end lemon zest.
I have also had great luck drying my own lemon zest. Unless your kitchen is humid, it will probably dry in a day or two just sitting on a plate on the counter.
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Can you substitute dried lemon zest for fresh?
If you have dried lemon peel in your pantry, it can also stand in for fresh lemon zest. Since the flavor is more concentrated than fresh zest, use one-third as much as the recipe calls for. So, if your recipe calls for a tablespoon, you'll want to use one teaspoon of dried peels. Have fresh oranges or limes on hand?Can I use dried lemon peel instead of lemon zest?
Dried lemon peel is lemon zest that has been dehydrated, so it's a fantastic lemon zest substitute. That said, the flavor is much more intense, so use two-thirds less dried lemon peel than the zest called for in a recipe. In other words, if you need 1 tablespoon of lemon zest, use 1/3 tablespoon of dried lemon peel.How do you substitute lemon zest?
Fresh lemon juice (in some cases). The best lemon zest substitute to bring a zing to a recipe? Fresh lemon juice. Of course, if you don't have lemon zest it's highly unlikely you'll have lemon juice on hand.How do you use dried lemon zest?
What to do with Dried Lemon PeelHow to Zest a Lemon | 5 Quick \u0026 Easy Ways!
More answers regarding how much dried lemon zest to substitute for "zest of one lemon"?
Answer 2
Here's what I do. Zest all your lemons, measure out 1 Tbl. at a time and put it into an ice cube tray. Add a little bit of either water or lemon juice and freeze. When frozen you can pop them out and store in a zip lock bag or a freezer safe container. When you need some zest just grab a cube and defrost. Hope this helps.
Answer 3
Lemons and Limes will freeze (i would advise bagged with little air - seems the zest can get freezer burned...), and can be zested frozen (eg with a nutmeg grater, or said microplane).
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If no such tool is available: A vegetable peeler can get the zest off in strips, it depends on the exact peeler whether there will be too much pith attached (can be shaved off with a sharp knife - careful!). Then mince with a knife. Will probably not work with frozen, though...
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The kind of bagged grated lemon zest some brands sell has little to do with lemon zest. Seen ingredients lists on that stuff that would make the product potentially unsuitable for vegetarians. I know health discussions are OT, but such alterations IMHO make culinary qualities of an ingredient questionable...
Answer 4
Approximately 1 teaspoon is 1 lemon.
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