There's clearly no excuse for raspberry balsamic, but pomegranate molasses is a perfectly respectable ingredient used in much middle-Eastern cooking. The
Moro cookbook (which generally rocks) has this to say:
Pomegranate molasses ('dibs rumman' in Arabic) is a syrup made by boiling down the juice of sour Iranian pomegranates until it thickens and changes in colour from red to rich auburn brown. It has a colour and consistency similar to black treacle and is sweet-sour in flavour. Common in Syria and Lebanon, it is used for flavouring soups and stews, sauces, meat and fish, as well as for dressing salads or vegetables, or diluted as a drink.
The book's own uses include a marinade for grilled quails. One day I will invent a stunning cocktail that features the stuff

Edit: oh yeah, I should finish that link.
Edited by Kikujiro, 06 January 2003 - 07:47 AM.