Coffee Granite
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 4 cups hot espresso
- Crema and lemon twists for garnish
- In a small bowl, stir the sugar into the coffee.
- Cool and place in refrigerator to chill.
- Pour espresso mixture into a shallow metal baking pan and freeze, stirring with a fork every 1/2 hour, until mixture is coarse ice crystals, but not frozen hard, about 3 to 4 hours.
- To serve, scoop granite into serving bowls.
- Serve with crema on top, and lemon twists on the side.
- Sorrel is a perennial plant native to Europe and Asia, now found in America and Australia.
- It has a refreshing, slightly sour taste since it contains oxalic acid.
- Sorrel is related to rhubarb (which also contains oxalic acid), and can be used as a vegetable (salads, purees) or as an herb (soups and sauces).
- It is available throughout the summer.
- Granite is coarse, crystalline ice, made without egg whites or milk products.
- It is made without an ice cream maker.
- Since granite has a low sugar content, compared to ice cream, it freezes quickly.
- History of ice cream: Before the freezer, Italians used to send runners to the mountains to get snow.
- They would flavor the snow with honey or fruit to make iced desserts.
sugar, hot espresso, lemon twists
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/coffee-granite-recipe.html (may not work)