June recipe: Red berry fool
Red berry fool |
Fruit fools
involve combining a fruit puree with custard or whipped cream or both, and are
some of the easiest desserts to make. I’ve
previously posted a recipe for gooseberry fool.
This variant uses red summer berries.
The photo shows a redcurrant fool, but you can use raspberries or strawberries
instead, or any combination thereof. Raspberries and strawberries need no
cooking.
Red berry fool
8 oz
(approx 250 g) red summer berries (redcurrants, raspberries, strawberries or a
mixture)
1.5 oz
(approx 40 g) sugar
5 fl. oz
(approx 140ml) double cream
Wash the fruit.
Hull the
strawberries and raspberries. Snip the stalks off the redcurrants.
If using redcurrants,
put the fruit in a saucepan with the sugar.
Heat
gently, stirring from time to time, until the sugar has dissolved, then cover
the pan and simmer for a few minutes until the fruit is soft and starting to
break up.
Remove from
the heat and crush the fruit with a wooden spoon. You can puree it in a food processor if you
like, but I never do. If you don’t like
pips, you can sieve the puree, but I never do this either.
Leave to
cool.
If using
strawberries or raspberries, simply mash the fruit and mix the puree with the
sugar. Again, if you don’t like pips you can sieve the puree, but I never do.
If using a
mixture, mix the mashed strawberries/raspberries with the cooled redcurrant
pulp.
Whip the
double cream until stiff.
Stir the
cooled fruit pulp into the cream.
Divide
between four glasses and chill in the fridge for at least an hour or overnight
before serving.
For larger
portions, divide the mixture between two or three glasses instead of four.
4 comments:
Now this sounds good. I love raspberries. And of course anything with whipped cream is good. :)
Yes, it's hard to go far wrong with fruit and cream :-)
I see that the older gooseberry entry already had the question I was about to ask, where 'fool' for a dessert came from.
And yes, it IS hard to go wrong with fruit and cream.
Rick - I think it was you that asked the question about the name last time. I rather like the idea of a derivation from something like 'airhead', though the Oxford dictionary seems far from certain.
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