Blackberries
are without doubt the gems of Autumn and I love them, however they
are definitely a labour of love if you
decide to go and pick your own! I did just that last week with my
Mother and Sister-in-law and it was worth every little thorn prick
and scratch we got! Thankfully this year, having learned my lesson in
the past, I came prepared and brought with me a pair of rubber gloves
(or Marigolds if you prefer!) which definitely helped. In the end we
all left with a good few buckets of beautiful, sweet, gleaming
blackberries.
After
eating quite a lot of the perfectly sweet berries I decided it was
time to do something else with them so since we are having a
beautiful Indian Summer I decided on some Blackberry Sorbet. It is so
easy to make and really lets the flavours
of the blackberries shine. It is definitely one of my absolute
favourite ways to enjoy blackberries.
Personally
I love to eat this on it's own but if you are serving it for a dinner
party dessert it is equally delicious with some thin shortbread
biscuits or for an extra special treat serve in individual glass and
top with some Sparkly!
250ml/
1 cup water
500g
blackberries, cleaned
Juice
of ½ lemon (roughly 2 tbsp)
Put
the sugar and water in a medium sized pan and cook gently until the
sugar has dissolved, stirring from time to time. Once it's dissolved
let the sugar syrup simmer gently for roughly 5 minutes until it has
thickened slightly. Leave to cool.
Once
the sugar syrup has cooled put the blackberries and half of the syrup
into a blender and puree until smooth. Sieve the blackberry mixture
into a large measuring jug or bowl to get rid of all of the seeds.
Add the lemon juice and taste to check everything is balanced.
Depending on how sweet your blackberries are add more of the sugar
syrup if needed.
Put
the mixture into the bowl of an ice cream maker (if you don't have an
ice cream maker simply pop the mixture into a big enough tupper ware
container then pop straight into the freezer. After a couple of hours
remove it from the freezer and break down with a fork. Return to the
freezer and repeat the process one more time before letting it freeze
completely.) and freeze according to the maufacturer's instructions
(my machine takes about 25-30 minutes). Put the sorbet into a
container then freeze completely until ready to serve, removing it
from the freezer 5-10 minutes before you want to serve it.
I love the color of this sorbet, it's so pretty! Maybe I can score some blackberries at the farmers market this weekend...
ReplyDeleteThanks Vicki! For your sake I hope you do...I'm off to brave the thorns again tomorrow for my last batch of the season : )
DeleteI wonder if Blackberries are what we call Cassis in France. if so, then this is my favorite Sorbet flavor! Thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteI think Cassis is blackcurrants rather than blackberries.... will need to double check though. That being said if you like Cassis I'm sure you will enjoy this! : )
DeleteLook at that colour! So pretty and a real triumph.
ReplyDeleteThanks Chele! : D
DeleteBeautiful vibrant colour. I bet it tastes fresh and zingy.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jacqueline! It's exactly that - sweet but zingy, fresh and so smooth! : )
DeleteThat sorbet looks divine, it's such a beautiful colour. I've just made something rather different with blackberries and being without gloves, received many scratches and black fingers. But I'd never have thought to make sorbet out of them.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I bet despite the scratches and stained fingers the taste was worth the effort! The one thing that puts me off blackberries a little are the seeds so I love this way of using them up as there are no seeds just super smooth sorbet with all the delicious blackberry flavour! I'm off to battle the thorns again tomorrow for the last batch to store in my freezer. Not sure how long they will last though : )
Delete