Showing posts with label grapefruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grapefruit. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 07, 2020

Grapefruit Campari Sorbet

Seasonal Recipe of the Pandemic
It's hot, it's humid, there are gross bugs crawling on me when I step outside, it's unsafe to go to the beach, or eat out, so basically all that's left to do is eat. I love making sorbets with the season's fresh fruits and any delicious combinations I can come up with. This one uses the great Italian aperitif Campari, plus pink grapefruit juice, how can you go wrong? It's so simple and so refreshing!



Ingredients
3 cups fresh squeezed pink grapefruit juice (about 6 grapefruits)
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup Campari

Procedure
Warm 1 cup of grapefruit juice with the sugar over low heat until the sugar dissolves. Then mix in the rest of the juice and the Campari. Chill mixture thoroughly then process in your ice cream machine if you have one. If you don't, freeze mixture in shallow tray till firm, then break it up with a knife, buzz up the chunks in a food processor, and refreeze.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Winter Jams

Even though it's winter, you can still play with fruit! At my new job, I get to do all sorts of fun projects. My current new favorite task is making the jams and jellies we serve with our breakfasts. Now, this will probably get even better in the spring when my palette of seasonal ingredients expands, but for now I am finding all kinds of great recipes to explore. We use them up so fast that I do not have to get involved in the canning process so I have not included it in the instructions, but it's not that complex and you can find excellent instructions elsewhere online. Here are 4 to try at home:


Grapefruit and Campari Marmalade

Ingredients 
6 pink grapefruits (or Ugli Fruit, which I used)
2/3 cup Campari
5-6 cups sugar (the amount is based on volume of prepared fruit)
Procedure
Peel the grapefruit, remove the white pith, and cut the rinds into 2-inch pieces. Bring some water to a boil in a small pot. Drop in the rinds and boil for 1 minute. Drain and discard the water. Repeat two more times using fresh water each time.  When done drain the rinds well. Chop the peeled grapefruit flesh into chunks and pick out the seeds (or just use seedless ones, d'oh!). Discard the seeds. Place the chopped fruit and accumulated juices into a food processor fitted with a cutting blade and process for 1 minute, until the mixture is well-chopped and frothy. Measure the amount of chopped fruit and juice. Return 1 cup of the fruit to the food processor. and process with the rinds till they are in small bits. Now use the same amount of sugar as the total amount of the fruit and juice mixture. Place the sugar in the pot with the fruit. Stir the chopped rinds into the fruit and sugar mixture in the large heavy pot. Stir in the Campari. Bring to a boil, stirring, and reduce heat to maintain a constant simmer. Cook for 25 minutes, stirring gently to prevent scorching and boil-overs. The color will darken as the marmalade thickens.

If you have any doubts, you can test the marmalade: put a tablespoon on a small plate, put the plate in the freezer for three minutes. The marmalade is ready if it no longer is runny. Note: it's a traditional marmalade in the sense that it's a bit bitter — much like myself. This recipe makes about 12 half-pint jars.


Grilled Anjou Pear Butter

Ingredients
3 pounds ripe Anjou pears quartered, seeded, skin on
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1/2 cup sugar
2 1/2 teaspoons ground cardamom
1/2 cup water

Procedure
Take your quartered pears and brown them on a grill (or in the broiler). Combine the charred pears with all the ingredients in a large pot. Bring the mixture to a boil then reduce the heat and simmer for about 20 minutes or until very tender. Run the mixture through a food mill, which will remove the peels (and any seeds you missed) and leave you with a lovely purée. Pour the purée into a pot and simmer on the stove till thickened, about 1 hour on a very low flame. Or you can roast in at 300 degree oven for about 2 hours, stirring every 30 minutes so it won't stick, until it reaches the consistency you like.


Red Grape and Cassis Jelly

Ingredients
3 pounds (about 2 quarts) of flavorful grapes, Concord are best, but ruby red work well, too
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup Cassis black currant liqueur
1 1/4 cup granulated sugar
3 tablespoons apple pectin
1/4 cup lemon juice

Procedure
Wash and stem grapes — don't worry if small stems remain on the fruit, since they will be strained out along with the seeds. In a nonreactive, heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring grapes, water, and Cassis to a boil and then reduce to a simmer. Simmer grapes, periodically stirring and crushing, until they've begun to lose their shape, you can see their color changing, and the liquid increases — about ten minutes. Remove from heat and cool slightly. Set a food mill (with the smallest sieve in place) over a large, heatproof bowl or pitcher, and pour grapes and cooking liquid through. Mill until all that remains are the seeds, skins, and stems. You will have about 4 cups (32 ounces) of grape pulp. In the same nonreactive saucepan, stir grape pulp together with sugar, pectin, and citrus juice and bring to a boil over high heat. Cook until the mixture registers 220 degrees on a candy or instant read thermometer. Turn off heat and skim any foam with a spoon. This will gel as it cools.



Strawberry and Vanilla Preserves with Balsamic Reduction

Yes, yes, I know strawberries are not a winter fruit, but they are really cheap right now, and sometimes only a berry jam will do!

Ingredients
2 pounds fresh strawberries, hulled and cut in quarters
5 cups sugar
1 tablespoon Balsamic Reduction (see below)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 pinch salt

Procedure
In a pot, combine the strawberries and sugar. Bring to a rolling boil and cook, stirring frequently, for 15 to 20 minutes, or until the berries start to fall apart and temperature of the mixture has reached 220 degrees, which means it will be nice and thick and set. Now stir in the balsamic reduction and the vanilla. Wasn't that was easy?

balsamic reduction

What's Balsamic reduction? Just what it sounds like, you take Balsamic vinegar and cook it down until the volume is reduced, and the flavor is concentrated. In a medium-sized, nonreactive saucepan bring 1 cup of vinegar to a simmer over medium-high heat, and then turn down to low. Simmer for about 10 to 15 minutes to thicken and reduce. Keep an eye on it — you don't want it to burn. When it coats the back of a spoon, you're good to go.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Grapefruit Gin & Tonic with Cilantro

Refreshing Beverage of the Week
This makes 2 lovely cocktails. Did you know that grapefruit is the new black?

Ingredients
3 ounces Gin
3 ounces pink grapefruit juice
1/2 ounce lime juice
2 dashes lemon bitters
3 sprigs cilantro - tough stems removed
6 ounces tonic water
2 sprigs cilantro as garnish

Procedure
Fill a shaker two thirds of the way with large ice cubes. Add the gin, grapefruit juice, lime juice, bitters and cilantro. Shake until the outside of the shaker becomes frosted. Strain into two old-fashioned glasses filled with several ice cubes. Top with the tonic water and give the drinks a quick stir. Garnish each glass with a cilantro sprig and serve.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Lillet Rose and Rhubarb Bellini

Refreshing Beverage of the Week
Here are two lovely Easter cocktails to try. And a crazy idea if you have any extra jelly beans around.

Lillet Rose from Martha Stewart

Ingredients
12 ounces Lillet Rose
12 ounces Ruby Red grapefruit juice
6 ounces gin
6 edible flower blossoms

Procedure
Combine 6 ounces Lillet, 6 ounces grapefruit juice, 3 ounces gin, and ice in a cocktail shaker. Shake until well chilled. Strain and divide cocktail among 3 stemmed cocktail glasses,Garnish with flowers. Serve immediately.

Rhubarb Bellini

Now, for something pink and different! An improved Bellini — sort of. How about champagne or Prosecco and Rhubarb syrup? First, you need to make the syrup.

Ingredients for syrup
4 C chopped rhubarb
1 cup sugar
1 cup water

Procedure
Combine everything in a heavy-bottomed sauce pan and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to a simmer and cook gently until the fruit is soft and the liquid has thickened slightly, about 20 minutes. Ladle into a fine strainer (or a coarse strainer lined with cheesecloth) that has been placed over a large bowl. Strain until most of the liquid is in the bowl. Give a little press on the solids with a spoon to extract more syrup.

Carefully pour the syrup into a clean bottle, cover or cork the bottle and refrigerate. It should keep for quite some time in the fridge. The solids make a nice rough jam, so if you want you can put them in a clean jar and keep them in your refrigerator for a week or so. It's great on toast!

To make the Bellinis, mix one part syrup to four parts sparkling wine, Champagne, or Prosecco.

The rhubarb syrup is also excellent on vanilla ice cream.

Flavor-your-own festive vodka

Looking for something to do with those leftover Easter jellybeans? Choose 10-15 jellybeans of the same flavor (or mix and match flavors for a fun quirky combination like piña colada, cherry coke, or banana split!) and drop them in a bottle of vodka. Let the vodka sit for about a week to allow the jelly beans to dissolve, flavoring your vodka to perfection!

Saturday, August 06, 2011

Flip Flop Punch

Refreshing Beverage of the Week
This recipe is for one of the most interesting punches that I have seen in quite some time. The creation of New York Mixologist Phil Ward, it uses chamomile tea-infused rum (instructions below), and it is fabulous with the lemon and grapefruit.

Ingredients
2 oz chamomile-infused rum
4 sugar cubes
3 oz club soda
1 oz lemon juice
1 1/2 oz grapefruit juice
grapefruit slices for garnish

Procedure
To make chamomile-infused rum: Add 4 bar spoons of chamomile tea to one bottle of rum. Let the concoction sit for an hour and forty five minutes and then strain out the tea. Save the bottle for storage.

To make the punch: Dissolve 4 sugar cubes in 1 oz. of club soda (this generally involves muddling to help the process). After sugar cubes are muddled/dissolved, add the rest of the ingredients one at a time and stir as added. Add ice once all of the ingredients have been added and stirred. Stir the punch until it is chilled. Strain punch into a glass or punch bowl, depending on the size of the portion, top with 2oz. club soda and garnish with grapefruit slices.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Grapefruit Campari Sorbet and Pomegranate Tangerine Sorbet

The Altitude Adjustment Section
Here are two super simple sorbet recipes which are unbelievably refreshing and do not require the use of much heat.

Campari and Grapefruit Sorbet

Ciao Bella has made this classic Italian-flavored treat since the beginning, and I love it!

Ingredients
3 cups fresh pink grapefruit juice (from about 4 large grapefruits), strained and chilled
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup Campari, chilled

Procedure
In a blender, combine the grapefruit juice and sugar, and blend until the sugar is dissolved. Add the Campari, pour the mixture into the container of an ice cream machine, and churn according to the manufacturer's instructions. Transfer to an airtight container and freeze for at least 2 hours before serving.

Pomegranate-Tangerine Sorbet

Ingredients
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
2 cups pure pomegranate juice
1 cup tangerine or orange juice
1 tablespoon finely grated tangerine peel or orange peel
Mint sprigs

Procedure
Combine sugar and water in heavy medium saucepan. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Bring to boil. Remove from heat and cool completely. Whisk in pomegranate juice, tangerine juice and peel. Transfer mixture to ice cream maker and process according to manufacturer's instructions. Freeze sorbet in covered container until firm.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Grapefruit Cooler

Refreshing Beverage of the Week
Okay Irene, this one is for you. A nice, refreshing, non-alcoholic beverage to cool you off after a hard day at the gym, or the opera, or where ever you hang out these days. Its called the Grapefruit Cooler, it's best if it's made a 4 hours ahead of time, this recipe makes a pitcher of 6 drinks, and it goes something like this:

Ingredients
2 ounces fresh mint
2 tablespoons sugar syrup
2 cups grapefruit juice
1/4 cup lemon juice
About 30 cracked ice cubes sparkling water to top off

Procedure
Crush the mint leaves in a small bowl. Add the simple syrup and let soak for at least 2 hours. Occasionally go over the the bowl and mush the leaves around with the back of a spoon so they give up all their yummy flavor. Strain the syrup into a pitcher and add the grapefruit juice, and lemon juice. Cover with plastic and refrigerate for two hours. To serve, fill 6 chilled Collins glasses with cracked ice. Divide the juice mixture over 6 glasses and top with sparkling water. Garnish with mint sprig. Yes, Irene I can hear you complaining that this drink takes too long — but you know, good things come to those who wait.