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It's Hot today! Strawberry Sorbet!

Added by Despina33 | Wed 28 Jan 2009 @ 12:03

It's Hot today! Strawberry Sorbet!

Ingredients
Recipe: Serves 6-8
2/3 cup (160 ml) water
2/3 cup (135 grams) granulated white sugar
5 cups or 2 pounds (1 kg) fresh or frozen unsweetened strawberries
2 tablespoons lemon juice2 tablespoons Grand Marnier or other liqueur (optional)

Method
And what better time then to make some homemade strawberry sorbet. Turned out yummy and really cools you down!

[i]Note: If you taste the sorbet [b]after freezing [/b]and find the amount of sugar is not right, adjust the level of sugar by adding a little sugar syrup (too little sugar in sorbet) or water (too much sugar in sorbet) and then refreeze the sorbet. The sorbet is not affected by thawing and refreezing[/i]

Place the sugar and water in a small saucepan, over low heat, and stir until the sugar is completely dissolved (about 3-5 minutes). Boil the mixture for one minute then remove from heat. Pour the sugar syrup into a heatproof container, and place in the refrigerator until completely chilled (about an hour or so).

Meanwhile, thaw the strawberries and then place the thawed strawberries in a food processor and process until the strawberries are pureed. Transfer to a large bowl, add the lemon juice and liqueur (if using), and refrigerate until the mixture is thoroughly chilled. (If using fresh strawberries, puree the berries in the food processor, transfer to a large bowl, add the lemon juice and liqueur (if using), and place in the refrigerator until chilled.)

Once the simple syrup and pureed strawberries are completely chilled, combine the simple syrup with the pureed strawberries. Pour the mixture into a 8 inch (20 cm) or 9 inch (23 cm) stainless steel pan (sorbets will freeze faster in stainless steel), cover with plastic wrap, and place in the freezer. When the sorbet is completely frozen (3 to 4 hours), remove from freezer and let stand at room temperature until partially thawed. Transfer the partially thawed sorbet to the food processor, and process to break up the large ice crystals that have formed on the sorbet. (This step is what gives the sorbet its wonderful fluffy texture.) Place the sorbet back into the pan and refreeze for at least three hours, and up to several days.

tried this recipe or a similar one? share your tips...

1. by Erin on Tue 30 Nov 2010 @ 04:10

The original recipe, almost word for word, can be found at 'The Joy of Baking', here: http://www.joyofbaking.com/StrawberrySorbet.html - be aware though that there is a typo (800ml should be 80ml)

2. by Katie on Wed 16 Jun 2010 @ 18:42

What does that mean freeze up to several days? Does that mean it will only last that long! What a waste to make loads of sorbet to last through winter months if thats the case!

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