Here we have another recipe from Thalia's book Wild Sweetness. She is the Brisbane-based creator of an award-winning food blog called Butter and Brioche. And her new book is a honey. Regular readers will have seen my Anzac Day post of her recipe for oat biscuits with rosemary, apricot and white chocolate. They were a real winner with everyone. And I'm keen to try out lots more of her recipes.
Thalia calls this one Currants and Cream, but as I had to use blackberries instead, I've called it a fool. No, not your local silly person, but that English dessert of fruit purée mixed with whipped cream or custard. I remember when sharing a house with several other students years ago, I tried to make a dried apricot fool but not having a blender or processor, it ended up a kind of fibrous, orangey-brown mush. Not pleasant, my dears. Thank goodness for a well-equipped kitchen these days.
so sweet, so fruity, so delicious |
Serves 4-6:
ingredients:
115g./4 oz white chocolate, finely chopped
400 mLs/14 oz thickened/heavy cream
125g./4.4 oz blackberries or blackcurrants
50g./1.8 oz white or caster sugar
2 tbs Chambord or Crème de cassis
Method:
You make the cream by placing the chocolate in a medium heatproof bowl, then -
Pour 240 mLs/8 oz of the cream into a medium saucepan, bring it to the boil, then pour it over the chocolate
Put it aside for a minute to melt the chocolate, then give it a good stir till well-mixed and smooth
Now grab some clingfilm and cover the bowl, making sure you've pressed the clingfilm onto the surface of the chocolate mixture - you don't want a skin to form
And into the fridge it goes for around 6 hours to chill
While it's chilling, get on to the fruity part by putting the fruit and sugar and liqueur into a medium saucepan
Heat over medium-low till the fruit slumps (says Thalia) - i.e. goes limp but still has some shape, and the juices are thick and syrupy
Into the fridge it goes to chill also
When you're going to eat this, put the chocolate cream mixture into a bowl, add the rest of the cream, and beat with electric hand-beaters or in a stand mixer till you have soft peaks
Gently stir in the fruity purée, till you have beautiful dark-pink streaks throughout - don't go crazy here! - you want a beautiful rippled effect
Place it back in the fridge for an hour to chill right down
Serve with a crunchy little Amaretti biscuit or biscuit/cookie of your choice
Confession time:
I made an oopsy with this recipe. A friend dropped in, and I wasn't concentrating, so instead of boiling 240 mLs of the cream, I boiled the whole darn lot of it! And guess what? It worked perfectly. I put it in the fridge for 6 hours, then whipped it till soft peaks, stirred in the fruit - ét voilà, perfectly beautiful blackberry fool. So maybe do it my way, and make it easy on yourself
Notes:
Use a good quality white chocolate like Lindt; it's a beautifully thin and well-tempered chocolate so I was able to just break it up with my fingers - no knives involved :-)
I used frozen fruit as it's not blackberry season here, and it's very difficult to get blackcurrants at any time. It took about 10 minutes to get to 'slump' stage
Use whatever fruity liqueur you fancy, or a couple of teaspoons of vanilla extract
bring the cream to a boil |
pour the hot cream over the white chocolate |
gather your fruity ingredients |
into the saucepan for some slumping :-) |
bubble bubble toil and trouble - till slumped |
6 hours later - spoon in the syrupy fruit |
stir gently through the chocolate cream |
and ... eat with a golden spoon - tee hee |
© Sherry M. |
I make oopsies in the kitchen all the time! Kind of my natural state, alas. Anyway, this looks good. We like foolish stuff. :-)
ReplyDeletei like foolish stuff too:-)
DeleteHow could that be anything but yummy?
ReplyDeletebest... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
so true Mae. very delish!
DeleteVery fruity and tempting! My husband is a huge fan of white chocolate and blackberries (p.s they are so expensive this year), so I believe this would be a perfect dessert for him.
ReplyDeleteit is indeed angie:) So delicious, creamy and fruity.
DeleteOh this would go down so well in our house at the moment. Looks delicious Sherry and quite healthy with fruit in it. I love that desserts can be fun. Eton Mess also comes to mind.
ReplyDeletehi pauline
Deleteit is so delicious. Hubby loved it as he is a huge white choc fan!
Love Chambord - perfect pairing with blackberries. Comfort dessert at its best!
ReplyDeleteit's a lovely fruity liqueur isn't it? and yes goes so well with blackberries.
DeleteIt is very difficult to find blackcurrants here, too, Sherry. I support your substitution of blackberries! (Partly because blackberries are my favorite berry, too!) I've always been intrigued by the fool, but I've never tackled making one. This one sounds fantastic, though! And what it difference it makes having the right tools - both in the kitchen and just general home maintenance.
ReplyDeleteyep good tools maketh the woman - or man :-)
DeleteThanks for sharing this recipe. The fruit and the chocolate combination sounds heavenly.
ReplyDeleteHi there
Deletesadly your profile doesn't appear when i click on your name so i have no idea who you are! it'd be fab if you updated it to show your name. thanks for stopping by.
Sounds delicious. We have wild blackberries in September, I am making this.
ReplyDeletehi liz
Deletelucky you. yes wild ones would be great in this!
You had me at melted chocolate and cream - this looks and sounds delish!
ReplyDeleteoh yes it is!
DeleteSounds delicious! I love anything with cream and berries. 😀
ReplyDeletehi Nil
Deleteyes they're a great combo!
This looks absolutely wonderful! And I love that you had a little “Oopsie.” Don’t we all? I especially like it when they turn out OK in the end…
ReplyDeletehi david
Deletein my old age, i keep having lots of oopsies!:)
How pretty and it must be so light and creamy. Yum!
ReplyDeletethanks karen. yep very pretty and very delish and creamy.
Delete