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Cold Season Remedy: Homemade Cough Drops

2010-02-01-CoughDrops.jpgWe hate cough drops almost as much as we hate coughing. The ones we buy in the store either taste like candy or some kind of poison, and the throat-soothing affect of either is always a little dubious. But here are some cough drops we think we can get on board with: the homemade kind!

 
 

This tutorial comes by way of the Instructables website, and simply combines super-concentrated tea with a dose of sugar. You boil them together until reaching the hard-crack stage and then pour the syrup into a simple mold made of powder sugar to harden. (By the by, that powder sugar mold has intriguing candy-making possibilities, no?)

One batch makes dozens of little lozenges - more than enough to keep us stocked through the cold and flu season. Wrapped in wax paper, we can carry them around in a pocket or backpack for when we need them. We think a little packet would also make an excellent addition to a care package for a sick friend or family member.

The tutorial makes this look easy enough to do even while sick, but we think we'll make a preventative batch just to be on the safe side!

Get the Tutorial: Homemade Cough Drops from Scoochmaroo via Instructables

Related: Recipe: Bourbon Cough Syrup for Grownups

(Image: Scoochmaroo via Instructables)

Tags

Health, Tips & Techniques, Roundup - Food Blogs, candy, flu season, flu, sick, candy making, sick food, cough drops, throat drops

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Comments (9)

Fantastic! Thank you!

posted by zuzupetals on February 1st 2010 at 10:47am
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Wow! I would have never thought of this. I love this idea!

posted by shantell on February 1st 2010 at 11:02am
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I have done something similar with a strong horehound tea. It worked out very well.

posted by RondaK on February 1st 2010 at 11:10am
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I feel the same about most, if not all, shop cough sweets (the swiss herbal brand Ricola is the best of a bad bunch IMO) so thank you for this! I also just fancy trying out this method.

posted by Sian on February 1st 2010 at 11:14am
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martha stewart also has an awesome recipe for homemade cough drops with ginger and horehound.

posted by pedalpowered on February 1st 2010 at 12:42pm
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I'd like to try this with Traditional Medicinals Throat Coat tea. I've found it to be a very effective remedy (although I can't discount the placebo effect in that.)

Traditional Medicinals makes a pastilles version of Throat Coat, but they're ridiculously expensive -- about $7 for 24, $0.30 each. (A 30-count bag of Walgreens cough drops is going for $0.50 on the website -- less than $0.02 each.)

The Throat Coat tea bags are $3.50 for 16, and this recipe appears to make about 34 cough drops out of 4 tea bags. That's $0.88 worth of tea bags, or about $0.03 a cough drop, plus the cost of the sugar. Still more expensive than the Walgreens, but also a lot more pleasant.

posted by EmilyW on February 1st 2010 at 3:15pm
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But...but...the cherry Luden's are tasty. lol.

Anyway, I never bother with cough drops, because yes, the 'medicated' types are nasty. If I have a sore throat I nuke some jello back into its liquid stage and drink that warm.

posted by Kakugori on February 2nd 2010 at 1:53am
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@Kakugori does that have any kind of medicinal effect other than it being a warm liquid or do you just like warm liquid jello? lol I've not ever heard of anyone doing this.

posted by ProfanitySucks on February 3rd 2010 at 8:54pm
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Well, I just like warm liquid jello (much more than I like it cold!). But the gelatin sort of coats your throat going down, and it feels nice. More effective than a cough drop, IMO.

posted by Kakugori on February 4th 2010 at 7:46pm
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