Showing posts with label frozen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frozen. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Pear sorbet, and other frozen delights



You might remember a post I wrote quite a few months ago, on mulled wine granita. Well, this week I’ve revisited the wonderful world of frozen desserts: I had to poach some pears the other day (for more on that, you’ll have to see November’s issue of The Field) and ended up with rather a lot of leftover pear-flavoured syrup. Pear sorbet was pretty much the first thing that sprang to mind. You don’t have to use pear syrup for the recipe below, but if you’ve poached a few pears (as we all do once in a while...) and happen to have some hanging around, sorbet is a great way to use it up.

Some history and definition

Supposedly invented by the Romans (there’s a lovely story about the Emperor Nero having buckets of ice passed by hand along the Appian Way to his banqueting tables, where it was mixed with honey and wine), sorbet came to Britain via Italy and France in the late 17th century. It’s made from sugar syrup, fruit puree and often contains alcohol as well (woop woop). It’s distinct from ice cream because it contains no dairy products, and from granita because of its smaller ice crystals, which give it a smoother texture.

The science bit

When water freezes, it forms one solid mass of ice crystals – like an ice cube, for example. Sorbet and ice cream are both water-based (which is why they freeze) but in order for them to freeze into a lovely scoop-able softness, you need to add other ingredients to the water. This reduces the freezing point of the mixture so it doesn’t set as hard, and it then needs to be churned as it freezes to break up the ice crystals, which gives a smoother texture and again stops it from freezing solid. In the case of ice cream the addition is a diary-based product like cream or custard, but with sorbet fruit purée and sugar syrup are used. Alcohol also helps to lower the freezing point.

Unlike ice cream, sorbet doesn’t need to be constantly churned as it freezes (although you can make it in your ice cream maker if you have one) – you just have to give it a good stir with a fork every half an hour. This makes it an easy option for those of us who are still waiting for that state-of-the-art ice cream machine to appear in our Christmas stocking - all you need is a pan, a sieve and a Tupperware (much cheaper...)

Variations

Since it’s based on fruit purée and sugar syrup, sorbet is open to a whole variety of variations. You can vary the purée itself or mix two or three different types of fruit, not to mention the variety of alcohols and flavoured syrups at your disposal. I talked a bit about flavoured syrups in my blog on lemonade, and the ones you use for sorbets are no different.

You can infuse a huge variety of flavours into a syrup just by adding a herb or spice and heating it through: so, for example, to make rosemary syrup you mix add equal quantities by volume of sugar and water, throw in a couple of sprigs of rosemary, then bring it briefly to a boil, cool, and strain. Rosemary syrup goes well with pear purée in a sorbet.

You could also try strawberry sorbet with basil syrup or black pepper syrup, or raspberry sorbet made with cassis or with mint syrup. Apple and mint sorbet is pretty refreshing, and if you use rum as the alcohol element you’ve pretty much got apple mojito sorbet. In fact, a lot of cocktail flavour combinations work well as sorbets, so you can pretty much pick your favourite cocktail and adapt it to make a sorbet recipe. As usual, get creative!

One last note
Just out of pure interest, there’s an awesome machine called a pacojet which you can read about here (no, they are not paying me...but they probably should be). You can literally put whole pieces of fruit and sugar syrup in, freeze them, and it micropurées them to make a perfect, fresh sorbet without even needing to cook the fruit. And you can do it with meat to make perfectly smooth patés and make sauces without ever needing to defrost the ingredients. How cool is that? If I had £5,000, I’d be sorely tempted.

And without further expensive distraction, on to a recipe: simple pear sorbet with vodka (or calvados). Enjoy!


Pear Sorbet with Vodka or Calvados

Ingredients

1kg pears, as ripe as you can get
200g sugar
200ml water
65ml vodka or calvados (apple brandy)

Method

Peel and quarter the pears (you don’t need to worry about coring them though). Put the sugar and water in a large pan and stir over a fairly gentle heat until all the sugar has dissolved. Add the pears and bring to a boil. Simmer until the pears are so soft they’re falling apart. If they don’t fall apart by themselves after half an hour or so, you can give them a hand with a liquidiser!

Push the pear mush through a fine sieve to remove any pieces of core or pips. You’ll probably have to push it through with a spoon and it might take a little while, but I prefer doing this to having to core the pears beforehand – you’ll have to sieve it either way, so why make extra work for yourself?

Once it’s all been through the sieve, you just need to mix in the vodka or calvados, then pop it in a freezer-proof container, cover it (clingfilm is fine) then put it in the freezer and give it a good mix with a fork every half an hour.

It might seem like nothing’s happening for the first hour or so, but eventually it’ll start to freeze around the edges. Just keep mixing every half an hour to break up the ice crystals, and eventually it will be frozen all the way through. It’s best served within a couple of days of making it, otherwise the crystals start to get big again. It’ll keep for a week or so in the freezer.

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Some rather gourmet Granitas


Originating in Sicily, a granita is rather like a coarse-grained sorbet. It works well as a light option for pudding, or an accompaniment to some fresh fruit in summer. It also makes a wonderful palate cleanser between courses, especially when you want to make an impact. 

There are various kinds of frozen dessert created in slightly different ways; for example, ice cream is made by freezing a dairy-based mixture, such as cream or custard, while it’s being either regularly stirred or churned to break up the ice-crystals as they are formed. This creates a smaller crystal and therefore a smooth, creamy-textured ice cream. Sorbet-making uses the same process, but the mixture is based on water or fruit juice. The base mixture of a granita is very similar to that of a sorbet, but the freezing process involves less stirring. This means that larger ice crystals are allowed to form, giving granita a coarser texture than sorbet. 

Don’t think that a coarse texture means an unsophisticated dessert, however. There is a huge scope for subtle flavour combinations in a granita, and it looks fantastic piled up in a martini or wine glass with a couple of appropriate garnishes. Including alcohol in your granita is not an absolute necessity, although I've done so in both of mine. However, it does stop the ice from setting too hard, creating a pleasingly slushy texture rather like a grown-up Slush Puppy; and of course, the fact that it’s frozen doesn’t stop it getting you tipsy...

Granita really is a fantastic opportunity to get creative with flavours, so without further ado, here are a couple of suggestions to get you started.


Apple and Mint Granita
Lovely for summer (spring’s just around the corner folks!)

Ingredients
1 litre of apple juice, preferably unsweetened and not from concentrate
A few sprigs of mint
A couple of cooking apples
A squeeze of lemon or lime
200g sugar
A dash of calvados or apple vodka (optional)

Method
Chop up, peel and deseed the apples and cook them with 100g of the sugar and a little water until they are very tender or falling apart. If necessary, blend them until they’re sufficiently mushy. Leave to cool. 

Meanwhile, put the apple juice, mint and the rest of the sugar in a large pan with some lemon juice and your choice of alcohol if using. Bring slowly to the boil, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Leave to cool to room temperature so that the mint infuses, then sieve or pick out the mint stems and add the apple pulp.

Put the resulting mixture in the freezer (you can use the pan you boiled it in as long as it’s freezer-safe) and allow it to freeze, stirring every 20 minutes or so. You won’t need to stir so often if you’ve included alcohol, and the granita may take longer to freeze.

Before serving, fluff the granita up with the tines of a fork so that the ice crystals are of a roughly even size. Serve in a martini glass with a sprig of mint and perhaps a twist of apple or a couple of raspberries.


Mulled Wine Granita
This is a very easy recipe I did as a palate-cleanser on Christmas Day. It also makes a great light dessert. 

Ingredients
1 bottle of red wine
1 orange
1 lemon or lime
1 cinnamon stick
2 star anise
4 cloves
135g granulated sugar
125ml water

Method
Zest and juice all the citrus fruit. Put the wine in a large pan and add all the other ingredients. Gently heat, stirring, until the sugar dissolves. Bring very briefly to the boil (take the pan off the heat as soon as it starts to bubble). Then put the pan aside for the spices to infuse, and leave it until it’s cool. 

Pour the wine through a sieve into a freezer-friendly container and pop it in your freezer. If the pan you boiled it in is ok to freeze you can use that. You need to leave it until set – for at least six hours, depending on your freezer. Give it a stir every one or two hours if you can. It will set eventually, but not particularly hard, as the alcohol stops it from freezing solid. 

Serve in a glass, decorated with a cinnamon stick if you've got enough. You could also use a twist of orange, a couple of skinned segments, or even a star anise of two (but don't let your guests bite into them!). This granita also looks very striking served over a scoop of vanilla ice cream, although I can't say that the flavour combination is everyone's cup of tea...

So that was granita. Remember to experiment, and Happy Freezing!