The Fourth
of July is a week away, are you having the family and neighbors over a BBQ?
What are you going to serve for dessert? How about sorbet?
I love sorbet
in the summer time when it is ninety plus and the humidity is just as high. On
days like those it almost too hot for even ice cream!
What is
sorbet, you ask? It is usually a combination of water, sugar and pureed fruit. This
is super simple; you can get little hands to help you.
I have an
electric one-quart ice cream maker I use to make our sorbet. Do not worry if
you don’t have one, you don’t need it! All you need is a freezer and a banking
pan.
There are
three sorbet recipes; I am going to share with you today. The strawberry is the
only one that does not contain alcohol, so please keep this in mind if you are
serving to the underage crowd.
The most elegant of the three is a champagne
sorbet! It contains a few strawberries, which we all know strawberries and champagne
are like peanut butter and jelly. They pair each other perfectly.
Like the idea of strawberries and champagne? Check
back in the few days for champagne soaked strawberries!
For those of you who prefer beer and
ice cream floats, to champagne and sorbet, I have the perfect recipe for you at
the bottom of the page!
So let’s get
started!
Strawberry Sorbet
Ingredients:
2/3 cup water
2/3 cup sugar
2 lbs strawberries (about 5 cups)
2 tbsp lemon juice
Stir sugar and water together in a
small saucepan over low heat until sugar has dissolved. Bring sugar and water
syrup to a boil, then remove from heat.
Allow to cool in pan for a 1/2 hour
(the syrup is extremely hot) before transferring to a 1 cup container and
chilling it in the refrigerator.
While the syrup is cooling, hull
strawberries and place them in a food processor or blender. Blend strawberries
to a puree.
Refrigerate puree until syrup has
chilled – about 1 hour.
Combine
chilled syrup and strawberry puree, then transfer to an 8-inch metal baking pan
(stainless steel is best).
Cover with plastic wrap
and freeze for 3-4 hours.
Blueberry Sorbet
This recipe calls for less sugar than
most recipes. You can use either fresh or frozen fruit. Personally I like using
fresh blueberries since they are in season right now.
Ingredients:
8
cups fresh blueberries
1/2
cup water
1
tablespoon lemon juice
2/3
cup granulated sugar
1
tablespoon vodka
Blend
the blueberries, water, and lemon juice on high until the mixture is smooth.
Transfer the berries and juice to a large saucepan and stir in the sugar. Bring
the berry mixture just to a boil and immediately remove it from the heat. Allow
the berries to cool at room temperature for 5 minutes, and then press them
through a fine-mesh sieve. Discard the berry solids, and mix the puree with the
vodka. Allow the mixture to cool and then freeze it in an ice cream maker
according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Champagne Sorbet
This recipe came from About.com French Food webpage. I used a
bottle champagne left over from Christmas. We did not particularly care for the
champagne so I used it… figure it was better to use something we didn’t like
that I had on hand before spending the money for champagne we did like.
This recipe took extra dry champagne and made
it sweet and wonderful. You do not have to use the lemon juice in the recipe.
This is elegant sorbet could be used
year round for marking special events.
Ingredients:
2 cups Champagne
1 1/4 cups granulated
sugar
1/2 cup sparkling water
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon lemon zest
(optional)
8 fresh strawberries
(optional)
In medium saucepan over medium heat, bring
the champagne, sugar, and sparkling water to a simmer. Lower the heat slightly,
and continue simmering the champagne for about 8 minutes, until the sugar has
dissolved.
Remove from the heat and
cool the mixture to room temperature. Add the lemon juice and lemon zest, if
using, and stir the mixture thoroughly. Chill it until very cold, for about 2
hours. Freeze in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s
instructions. Serve garnished with strawberries, if desired.
Stout Beer Mini Ice Cream Floats
I found this recipe on Betty Crocker’s
webpage… who knew Betty like alcohol!
1 cup
premium vanilla ice cream
1/2 cup
stout draught beer (from 14.9-oz can)
3 tablespoons
chocolate-flavor syrup
Using small
ice cream scoop (about 1 tablespoon each), place 2 small scoops in each of 8
shot glasses. Slowly pour about 1 tablespoon beer into each glass.
Drizzle each
with about 1 teaspoon syrup. Serve immediately with small spoons.
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