Not yet a member Already a member ? Forgotten password ?
PETITCHEF
Add your blog-site | Add your recipes | Receive daily menu | Contact us

Blood orange and grapefruit jelly


By Tales from the Tiny Kitchen (Visit website)

(5.00/5 - 1 vote)


IMG_6783


Argh - why is it that jelly is such a royal pain in the arse to make? Every single recipe I've tried gives a specific number of gelatine sheets to use, and the jelly never EVER sets. The recipe I tried below (tsk tsk Nigel Slater) was no exception - it took three attempts to get it right. I thought I was going mad, effing and blinding and stomping around my kitchen in the early hours. I mean, how many flipping sheets of gelatine does one jelly need? Apparently the confusion occurs because chefs use a different size of sheet, but my gripe is that food recipe editors should realise that ordinary punters wouldn't use catering sized ones. We just buy the regular Supercook ones in the supermarket. Anyway. Rant over.

A really great fruit to make a jelly with is the blood orange. Blood oranges are in season right now. Don?t hang about, though ? you can only get them for a couple of months a year, and they?re really worth snapping up. Really nice ones, I think, come from Sicily ? you can get great organic ones from small growers there. In terms of flavour, blood oranges are slightly more perfumed than regular oranges; some have dark red flesh, others are a mottled mixture of red and orange, and some are just orange coloured on the inside. Part of the fun is unpeeling one to see how dark the segments are inside, then squeezing out the vivid juice. The only clue on a blood orange?s skin that the inside might be red coloured is a little red blush or mottling, otherwise they look exactly the same, albeit a bit smaller than normal oranges.

Uses? You can make a very grown up vodka and blood orange cocktail (fresh juice and voddy) and in terms of desserts I got the idea to make a posh fruit jelly for a dinner party. Jelly is such a great pud to make for a dinner party ? it wibbles on the spoon, feels nostalgic, but if you make your own with fresh fruit juice, it?s very grown up!

This jelly came in very handy when I had to provide the pudding course at a mate?s dinner party (a sort of pot luck supper where everyone brings a course) because you can carry it across London on the tube in your bag and it won?t break or spill, it?ll just wobble amusingly.

Blood orange and grapefruit jelly

Based on a recipe by Nigel Slater; serves 8

You will need:

10 ? 12 cardamom pods
1 litre fresh blood orange and pink grapefruit juice (it's nice to use a bit more blood orange juice than grapefruit - approx 1.5 kilos blood oranges and a couple of pink grapefruits)
Juice of half a lemon
Juice of half a lime
3 tbsp caster sugar
6 slices of peel taken from one of the blood oranges (if you use organic, you don?t have to worry about pesticides on the skin)
12 - 15 sheets of Supercook gelatine

Bash open the cardamom pods in a pestle and mortar and extract the black seeds. Juice the fruits, then put the juice of the oranges, grapefruit, lemon and lime in a stainless steel saucepan, add the cardamom seeds, sugar and the strips of orange peel. Stir until the sugar has dissolved, taste to check it's sweet enough, if not add a bit more sugar, then bring almost to the boil before turning off the heat and putting the lid on, letting the liquid cool down for about 20 minutes.

IMG_6782

   IMG_6785

Meanwhile, soak the gelatine leaves in water until floppy, then when the juice mixture has cooled down a bit (but still warm) add the gelatine to it and stir until dissolved. Pour the jelly mixture through a sieve to remove any seeds or peel, into either moulds, wine glasses or a large bowl and leave to set in the fridge overnight.

You could serve the jelly on its own, or with some nice shortbread and a blob of vanilla ice cream or double cream.

IMG_6788

Normally I would have put the jelly in individual glasses or moulds, but as I had to carry it across London, a big bowl had to do. Tastes the same, innit!



related searches :



Rate this recipe : Not good   so so   Good   Very good   Excellent !!!  




Imprimer cette page

Send this recipe to a friend

ask a question about this article

share on Facebook


Related recipes

  • Recipe Thai coconut mango jelly
    Thai coconut mango jelly (1 vote)
    Dessert Very Easy
    15 Minute(s) 30 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Bottom Layer 1 tbsp Unflavoured agar-agar powder 375ml Water 50g sugar 250ml Thick coc...
  • Recipe Coconut jelly
    Coconut jelly (1 vote)
    Dessert Easy
    30 Minute(s) 20 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :1 dry coconut, shelled and cut into small pieces 1 1/2 cups water 1 cup sweetened condensed milk 1 cup evaporated milk, or 1 cup low fat milk fo...
  • Recipe Iced orange cake(moist orange cake with citrus orange icing)
    Iced orange cake(moist orange cake with citrus orange icing) (1 vote)
    Dessert Easy
    30 Minute(s) 45 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Flour- 1 cup Eggs-2 Powdered Sugar- 1 cup Icing Sugar- 1 cup Orange Zest-2 tblspn Orange Juice-4 tblspn Melted Butter-100 gm Baking powder-2 ts...
  • Recipe Coconut and grapefruit jelly
    Coconut and grapefruit jelly
    Dessert Easy
    40 Minute(s) 1 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :For The Top Coconut Milk Layer 5g seaweed - soaked for 1/2 hour and drained 200ml coconut milk 1 1/2 tsp grapefruit rinds sugar as needed 1/2 cup wate...