I'm having a dragonfruit kind of summer! (Dragon fruit/dragonfruit? - I dunno.) I made this dessert when our Tassie friend dropped by recently, and I've made it again because it's delicious. You will need a large and powerful blender or food processor for this, my friends!
I have another version of this on the blog already, but I'm easing myself into blogging again, so I thought why not? Two birds one stone etc ... Have I mentioned that I fell over again just before Christmas? At least I fell fully on my knee, so my ribs had a shakeup but not a catastrophic event. My knee wasn't happy though. Reminder to self: Do not slip on wet bathroom floors!!
Miss P. doing the instant ice cream shuffle |
This recipe is taken from a Matt Preston (Aussie food critic/cookbook author) one. And as regards copyright - I've rewritten the prose (as I always do). Aussie copyright law says a list of ingredients is not under copyright (I mean how many ways can you say - one teaspoon of sugar?), but the prose is subject to it, so I always put the method in my own words.
Anyway, here it is:
Serves 6:
ingredients:
500g. (17 oz) frozen dragonfruit (or fruit of your choice)
40-50g. (1.5 oz approx) caster sugar or icing sugar
1 large egg white
1-2 tbs cherry liqueur (or vanilla extract or your fave liqueur)
1-2 tbs lemon juice, if not using liqueur
fresh fruit for serving, and some chopped-up dried fruit if you wish to gild the lily - I used dried dragonfruit of course :-)
Method:
Grab your super-sonic processor/blender and throw in the fruit
Whizz it and whizz it and whizz it till it starts to get soft and creamy - will take several (even 5) minutes
Add the sugar after a couple of minutes of whizzing, or when you remember it
Then tip in the egg white and the liqueur, and give it a quick blitz
Serve immediately with the fresh and dried fruit
Will store in the freezer for a few days, but is best eaten ASAP
Notes:
I used a mix of fruit - mostly dragonfruit with some raspberries and strawberries - but you choose! You can use bananas, or pineapple, or stone fruit; whatever you fancy. Just chop it up and freeze it before using in this dessert. I bought the frozen dragonfruit (too lazy to peel and chop the spiky, fresh ones), but sliced up the strawberries and froze them the night before with the fresh raspberries
just a few ingredients |
frozen fruit ready for blitzing |
just starting to go creamy on the right hand side |
and here's Miss K. about to dig in - yes really it's that pink! |
so strange! Looks kinda like dried liver or dead dog - tee hee |
looks pretty odd when dried, but all-Aussie so that's good |
and the ever-delightful Miss P. the Poet about to indulge when she was here |
The first one was not quite as vibrant in colour as the one I made most recently; I think I used a greater mixture of berries and dragonfruit that time, so it didn't go quite as vibrantly, lusciously pink! This is so simple and so fresh; definitely worth a go.
That looks very luscious with the combination of tropical flavors with more temperate-zone fruits. I've only seen dragonfruit in Hawaii, not here in the frozen north.
ReplyDeletebest... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
hi Mae
Deletewe grow a lot of tropical fruit up north here, in Darwin and northern Queensland. and we have temperate climates down south so we get the best of both worlds!
U.S. law says the same thing about copyright. You can't copyright a list of ingredients. Nor can you copyright a title (think of all the textbooks on Algebra, for example). The general rule is you can't copyright an idea (and a recipe list is an idea; as is a formula or an equation like 2+2=4). What you can do is copyright the expression of the idea (which is where the prose part of the description of the method comes in). Anyway, this looks terrific -- nice recipe. Sorry to hear you fell again. :-(
ReplyDeletethanks KR! I'm starting to feel a lot better these days. no more falling over!!
DeleteA perfectly healthy and yummy nice cream :-)
ReplyDeletethanks angie. it is delightful to eat AND you feel virtuous.
DeleteThis looks delicious, Sherry. I can’t find fresh dragon food much less frozen, but I will keep trying. I’ve never even tasted it!
ReplyDeleteit's wonderful david. and so pretty. we are lucky that we can get it fresh or frozen.
DeleteI've never seen the dried dragonfruit here in the US ( I'll look for it) but I do love homemade frozen desserts such as the one that you made.
ReplyDeletethank you judee. it does look kinda hilarious though ...
Deletewow that is pretty. Wish I could taste it!
ReplyDeleteit was delish mimi!
DeleteI honestly need one right now!
ReplyDeleteyep you do raymund :-)
DeleteHave never seen frozen dragon fruit! Interesting though.
ReplyDeleteyep very interesting. and pretty in pink ...
DeleteWhat a beautiful color!
ReplyDeleteit's a bit mindblowing really ...
DeleteLooks wonderful Sherry, I use dragon fruit in my smoothies using aloe juice or coconut water - delicioys
ReplyDeletethanks M. good idea for smoothies too.
DeleteI love my Vitamix for such instant ice cream. We rarely see this color of dragon fruit here but would definitely look for frozen.
ReplyDeletehi balvinder yes the red/pink dragonfruit is soooo pretty.
DeleteGlad you are enjoying your summner Sherry and what better way to do it than with this delicious ice cream! Roll on winter here in Scotland so I can enjoy ice cream's like this too!
ReplyDeletethank you Neil. yes ice cream always helps :-) Any time of year.
DeleteThis is such a nice and attractive looking recipe Sherry. I was sure I had left a comment before, I must have just read it and then become distracted, due to the busyness of our lives lately.I often see fresh dragonfruit at our markets, so I could probably improvise with the fresh ones somehow, dont you think.They must just freeze well.
ReplyDeletethanks pauline. I do that all the time, thinking I've already commented... Yes definitely you can peel and chop and freeze the fresh fruits. I was just too lazy to do it, except for the berries which were so easy to do.
DeleteI don’t think I have ever tried dragonfruit. I rarely see it locally and never frozen. Your recipe looks delicious though.
ReplyDeleteRecovery from a fall can take time. I have had back issues for years and after the fall off my bike in early October, my back is recovering still. I hope you heal well and soon.
thanks marie. yes i was amazed at the time it has taken to recover. the ribs healed but the muscles turned to concrete and would NOT get better for 6 months. but getting there now...
DeleteYikes - that dried dragonfruit certainly doesn't look too attractive! But you turned it into something delicious with this ice cream, Sherry. I'm not sure I've seen dragonfruit here, but I bet I could order it on Amazon! Keeping this one in mind for when it warms up here...whenever that might happen. Haha!
ReplyDeleteit's a bit hilarious, that dried fruit :-)
DeleteThis looks amazing! Can you believe I've NEVER tried dragonfruit before?! *blush!* - https://domesticgeekgirl.com
ReplyDeletedefinitely worth a try :-)
DeleteThat looks fabulous. I'm really glad you are getting back into regular blogging again.
ReplyDeleteAnd I've never had dragonfruit either. In fact, I've never seen it!
thanks so much Deb. it's good to be back!
Delete