The Amorino Guide to Gelato: Learn to Make Traditional Italian Desserts—75 Recipes for Gelato and Sorbets
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About this ebook
Learn the ins and outs of gelato, sorbet, and ice cream from the masters: how it's made, how to create different flavors and aesthetics, and more. Combining sweet flavors and scents with the smoothness of ice cream, fruits with the freshness of sorbets, choosing the best ingredients and the most natural; this is the passion of Amorino.
Included within this book are dozens of recipes for different types of frozen desserts and delicious accompaniments, such as chocolate and caramel sauces, as well as instructions to take your recipes to the next level by making them beautiful and ornate, adding embellishments, and more.
Ice cream is the delectation of the moment, the whim of pleasure, a pure delicacy. Let yourself be guided by your taste buds into deliciousness with The Amorino Guide to Gelato.
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Book preview
The Amorino Guide to Gelato - Stéphan Lagorce
INTRODUCTION TO FROZEN DESSERTS
- Equipment, Ingredients, Preservation Advice, Special Products -
The Pleasure of Homemade
Gelati, sorbets, ices, smoothies . . . Frozen desserts, endlessly.
______________
Gelati, sorbets, ices, smoothies: creations and frozen desserts are, contrary to conventional opinion, totally affordable when creating them yourself in your home. Often perceived as complex and delicate, these frozen specialties are, therefore, unjustly eliminated from the family culinary repertoire and quite often bought in stores. This reputation of being difficult is not really justified.
In this chapter, you’re going to discover a large number of mostly commonsensical recommendations, tips, and advice, so you feel completely at ease with recipes that can, at first reading, seem difficult to master. Discover which equipment you should use and which ingredients to have in your pantry in order to prepare succulent gelati and tasty sorbets. Advice concerning preservation and storage is also offered so that you have all the help you need to pull off these frozen specialties, from the simplest to the most delicate.
EQUIPMENT
______________
In the olden days, master artisans prepared their sorbets in barrels placed on ice extracted from snow-clad summits. The enlightened enthusiast of today finds at his or her disposal an abundant array of effective ice cream makers, well designed and more practical. Without them, it’s impossible to make good gelati—rich and smooth. Other equipment will be equally useful to you to create your frozen treats.
Mixing
Hand whisk
Wooden or plastic spoon
Bowls and mixing bowls
Cooking
Saucepan
Frying pan
Electric oven and baking sheet
Parchment paper
Straining
Conical strainer, fine strainer, or sieve
Stocking
Storage containers for gelati and sorbets
Airtight containers (for syrups, gelati that are chilling, sauces, coulis . . .)
Preparing and Presenting
Whipping siphon (for mousses and whipped creams)
Silicon molds (to form gelato)
Measuring
Electric scale (precise to the ounce)
Thermometer (for cooking sugar, meringues, sauces)
Measuring glass (precise to the fluid ounce)
Mixing and texturing
Electric beater (for meringues, zabagliones, mousse, whipped cream . . .)
Mixer (at least 1-quart capacity and working at 1,500 turns/minute minimum)
Churning
Plug-in ice cream makers
When connected to the power supply, these models have their own cooling unit. They are the best appliances for making gelato, since they function until the gelato or sorbet is fully ready. They are available in various sizes, designs, and programming. Choose the least complex ones (sometimes the most reliable) with a serviceable volume of 1 to 2 quarts, which is sufficient for household use.
Battery-run ice cream makers
When in use, the battery delivers heat extractions
(coldness) to the ingredients while you prepare your frozen treats. When the battery has delivered all its heat extractions,
your preparation can no longer congeal. These models may be suitable, but each time, you will have to begin your gelato and sorbet preps when they are already quite cold; otherwise, the gelato or sorbet will remain hopelessly liquid.
PRESERVATION
______________
The preservation of frozen ingredients is a fundamental principle, imperative to the flavor of gelati and to dietary hygiene. Above all, do not neglect this aspect of the process.
Gelati and sorbets
At home, gelati and sorbets should be stored in freezers programmed to reach a temperature of 0°F. At this temperature, the various components of the gelati and sorbets become (almost) inert: the bacteria can no longer develop, and the phenomena of oxidation and staling are slowed quite a bit. Thus, in essence, a gelato, or a sorbet, can keep for up to 18 months, without any damage to its constitution. As far as taste is concerned, that’s a different story. With time, the frozen ice crystals end up developing, connecting, growing, and, little by little, forming an unpleasant consistency. The very velvety texture homemade gelati and sorbets have when they are first removed from the ice cream maker hardens after barely a few days. To prevent this from happening, you will find at the end of each recipe a tip to avoid this mishap. Likewise, refer to p. 26, which returns in greater detail regarding this topic.
A few practical precautions
At regular intervals, check the true
temperature of your freezer with a thermometer. When you stock your gelati and sorbets, place them in clean and well-dried food containers. Always cover them with a thin covering when you stock them to prevent them from being saturated with the flavors of other nearby products (garlic, fish, meat . . .). Date clearly every product that you freeze and don’t keep them for more than 4 to 5 months.
Sauces and side dishes
By definition, these products (aside from caramelized nuts) are a lot more fragile than others, since they are not frozen. Fruit coulis, for instance, don’t run major risks, but sauces containing eggs are themselves extremely sensitive products.
A few practical precautions
When you cook a sauce with eggs, check its cooking temperature: 185°F suffices to pasteurize it. Have these sauces cool quickly. Place them in the fridge in an airtight container as soon as they are chilling. Consume them quickly, within two days after they are cooked.
GELATO INGREDIENTS
______________
No good gelato exists without good ingredients! This mantra is the best guarantee of high-quality gelato and frozen desserts. Fortunately, good ingredients are easy to find, since most of them (with few exceptions) are the products of everyday consumption.
Dairy products
Milk
Half-and-half or fresh whole milk is ideal for giving body and taste to your preparations. As for powdered milk, choose a nonfat milk.
Butter
Orient your preference toward soft butter or, better yet, extrafine
(made from pasteurized cream), whose inimitable flavor works wonders in gelati.
Cream
Choose light cream sold in the chilled food aisle (and not UHT light cream with a long shelf life). For thick crème fraîche, when a recipe requires it, choose the best quality, preferably organic with a seal of approval.
Mascarpone cream
Lean toward an Italian brand of mascarpone sold in a container, with a seal of approval if possible.
Yogurt
If you don’t prepare your yogurt yourself, choose yogurts made with whole milk and produced by a reputable brand.
Eggs
As much as possible, prepare your gelati only with organic or extra fresh eggs. Look at the package for organic (hens raised on organic feed and with access to the outdoors) or cage-free (non-organic hens with access to open areas).
Honey
Choose very strong-tasting and fragrant honeys (millefleurs, lavender . . .), whether liquid or solid. If you choose a honey that is too bland, your gelato will only taste like sugar.
Chocolate
Favor native chocolates that evolve from extremely distinctive flavors. Try to choose good grocery products in order to get away from generic and uninteresting tastes. Rather, lean toward dark chocolate containing at least 65 percent cacao.
Cocoa
Natural cocoa powder is now available in stores. Trickier to find but nearly irreplaceable, cocoa paste will let you make perfect gelati. You can replace it with chocolate that is 99 percent cacao.
Praline
A mixture (in equal parts) of roasted hazelnuts and finely ground sugar, this fragrant paste lets you prepare delicious hazelnut gelato. You will find it on the Internet and in a few gourmet shops that specialize in kitchen goods and products.
Vanilla
For your gelati and desserts, make yourself happy with the best and choose gorgeous bourbon vanilla beans, certainly rather costly, but so fragrant. Avoid extracts and other flavorings.
Coconut
Choose UHT coconut milk in cartons or the highest quality powder (of known origin and whose flavors are listed).
Coffee
As with chocolate, lean toward native coffees that evolve from assertive and distinctive characteristics. You can buy them ground. There are also liquid coffee extracts, which are quite practical to use and produce great results.
Nuts
Whether they are roasted or not, walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, pistachios, etc., always bring an inimitable flavor, as long as they are top quality. Lean toward products whose source and quality you know and which are preferably packaged in containers with an inert gas that prevents them from going bad.
Spice cookies
For spice cookie gelato, there are three possible solutions: make them based on your own cookie recipe; buy the cookies that you like, then crush them; or buy cookie dough in the store (which perfectly suits the recipe proposed on p. 78).
Other products
Alcohol
If you wish to add alcohol to your gelati, once again, only choose the best and use in moderation. Amaretto, citrus liqueurs, cognac, and Armagnac will all bring an inimitable stylishness to your recipes.
INGREDIENTS FOR SORBETS
______________
Making sorbets is very simple; in short, they contain fruits, sugar, and water. The quality of the fruits ultimately determines the success of the result. Knowing how to prepare a delicious sorbet consists, to a great extent, in knowing how to buy good fruit at the right moment.
Red berries
Strawberries, raspberries, black currants, red currants, gooseberries, cherries, figs . . . Buy products in containers which allow you to verify their quality: firm texture, beautiful colors, penetrating flavor. If you can’t find good fresh red berries, fall back on frozen fruits (preferably organic) that are, usually, of good quality. Thaw them, transform them into sorbets (p. 83) or coulis and sauces (p. 197), then consume them at once.
Yellow fruits
Peaches, nectarines, apricots, melons, plums, pears . . . Their respective seasons are short, so don’t miss them, because these are the only times of the year when you’ll be able to buy them at their peak for yourself. Give in to fresh peach sorbet in the fall and fresh pear sorbet in the summer! Yet remember that you’ll be able to use these products in the form of purées that are uncooked (p. 35) or cooked (p. 34: cooked fruits
).
Exotic fruits
Pineapples, mangoes, guavas, lychees, bananas . . . Ideally, look for them in season (better at year’s end) and in Asian grocery stores, where, being very popular, the inventory rotates regularly. Try pink guavas, mini bananas, Indian Alphonso mangoes, and Victoria pineapples in sorbets, which can produce so many unforgettable