When I was a kid I was channel surfing and I came upon a
cartoon about some kids trapped in a winter world and a really horrible witch
was after them. I changed the channel it scared me, as most 1970’s cartoons
did.
It was years later before I discovered that the cartoon I
was watching was The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Even more before I got
around to reading the book. I have to confess I have yet to read the whole of
The Chronicles of Narnia, but I am making my way through.
However when I was brainstorming a Narnia inspired food, in
my case dessert, I knew I was going to stick with The Lion, The Witch, and the
Wardrobe. Even more I knew I was going to base it on the horrible witch that
freaked me out when I was a kid. I love a good villain.
As the White Witch holds Narnia in a state of winter without
Christmas for 100 years I decided on ice cream. White “Witch” Chocolate Ice
Cream with specks of rose flavored Enchanted Turkish Delight dotted through
out.
It’s an interesting combination, just like I find the White
Witch interesting. However it is good unlike the White Witch, unless you want
to start the argument that she’s good at being bad? Probably shouldn’t go
there… First you need to start with the Turkish Delight as it should set over night.
If you have enough free time in one evening you could also make the custard for
your ice cream and let them both set over night. Then all you have to do the
next day is churn and mix in the Turkish Delight!
Enchanted Turkish Delight
There is more magic then science when making Turkish
Delight, thermometers are no good, only a lot of time, love, and mixing! A lot
of Turkish Delights have pistachios, hazelnuts, and pinenuts I have left them
out as I am folding it into ice cream and I wanted it to be smooth and white!
These will be softer then store bought Turkish Delight.
200g desiccated coconut
500g granulated sugar
125g cornflour
1 tsp rose water
600ml water
Line a 2lb loaf tin with parchment and scatter about 50g of
the coconut at the bottom of the tin, set aside.
Have a bowl of cold water at the ready. Put the rest of the
ingredients into a heavy bottom saucepan and dissolve the sugar and cornflour
over a medium heat stirring continuously.
You will start to see small lumps form, at this point whisk
it until it’s smooth and looks like glue. Switch back to a spatula, you will
need a spatula to gently and continuously scrap the sides and bottoms of the
pan. You have to keep it moving and it will take a while so get comfortable! In
about 20 minutes after the lumps, it’ll start to hiss and bubble. This is only
you’re half way mark. It needs to cook for another 20-30 minutes to get the
correct texture.
Once you have passed the 20-30 minutes you can start
testing. Place about a teaspoon of the goo, as I referred to it, into the cold
water press gently together with your fingers if it crumbles apart it needs to
cook a bit longer, if it gently gives and stays intake you’re good to go.
Take off the heat and dollop the goo into your prepared tin.
Smooth it with the spatula as well as you can and sprinkle another 50g of
coconut on top. Press it down with your hand to flatten.
Leave to cool overnight or about 8-12 hrs. It should be
springy to the touch and no indentations left. Cut it up half into cubes and
the other half into tiny pieces toss all of it in the rest of the coconut. Make
sure to keep it in an open bowl, as it will sweat if kept in an airtight
container. Eat within a week.
White “Witch” Chocolate Ice Cream
This ice cream has a custard base and like the Turkish
Delight requires stirring, but not nearly as much. On it’s own it’s a gorgeous
decadent ice cream, the Turkish Delight offers a reprieve of that richness.
It’s a sweet surprise that the Turkish Delight gives the ice cream. I wasn’t sure
how it would turn out and I’m happy I took the risk as it was delicious.
230g white chocolate, broken up
250ml whole milk
130g sugar
pinch of salt
5 large egg yolks
500ml double cream
Have everything ready: place the broken up white chocolate
in a bowl with a sieve over the top, have your eggs separated, gently whisked
and the double cream measured out.
Then in a saucepan gently heat the milk, sugar, and salt.
Once the sugar is dissolved and the milk mixture is warm slowly pour it onto
the egg yolks, whisking constantly, then pour back into the saucepan.
Stir continuously over a medium heat with a spatula, if your
spatula with stood the heat of the Turkish Delight it’ll be safe to use here,
scrap the bottom and keep the mixture moving. It’s ready when the mixture coats
the spatula.
Pour the custard over the white chocolate through the sieve.
Stir until all the chocolate is melted and the mixture is smooth, then stir in
the cream. In the ice bath that you had prepared stir the mixture until it’s completely
cool. Chill in the refrigerator overnight or until thoroughly chilled. Then
freeze in your ice cream machine according to the machines instructions.
To Finish: Fold the tiny bits of Turkish Delight into
the ice cream before placing in the freezer. Freeze in the freezer and then
serve it up whenever you’re feeling a bit witchy.
If you like my ice cream find it on The Chronicles of Narnia Food & Feasts page and click like below my entry! If you see any other fun Narnia
inspired treats you should like them too!! I hope I have inspired you to re-create this ice cream or create
something of your own based on this beloved series! I can't wait to see what you come up with!
Giveaway CLOSED
Leave a comment below telling me who your all time favorite villain is!For another entry "like" my Facebook page and leave a separate comment below saying you did so.For a third entry "pin" it on Pinterest and leave a separate comment below saying you did so.For a final entry follow me on Twitter @unitedcakedom and leave a separate comment below saying you did so.
notes: I’m and 80’s kid (if you didn't guess that from me just celebrating my 30th birthday!); Turkish Delight is adapted from Sugar & Spice by Gaitri Pagrach-Chandra and the White Chocolate Ice Cream is from The Perfect Scoop by David Lebovitz; I have had a quick look and an easy way to re-create this ice cream is to buy white chocolate ice cream (Waitrose was the only place I saw online that sells it) and buy some Turkish Delight, chocolate covered would ruin the snowy white affect, but either would do. Dish up the ice cream and sprinkle Turkish Delight on top! Easy Peasy.
My goodness, an ice cream to die for. It looks absolutely lush. I have never made my own turkish delight, and yours looks stunning. A fab entry for the competition!
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of Narnia Ice Cream!! what a great idea. I just retweeted you. Makes me wonder if we can do some kind of fairy-tale supperclub... will have a think. BTW I have read all the Narnia books, several times each. Truly the worst villain is Eustace, because he has no backbone and always so easily subjected to peer pressure. I hated him....
ReplyDeleteGreat giveaway! I love the Chronicles Narnia. Favourite villain has got to be the white witch!
ReplyDeleteLovely ice cream and great prize! Favorite villain is a difficult one, but if it's in Narnia, it has to be the White Witch.
ReplyDeletefollowing on twitter
ReplyDeleteLiked on facebook too!
ReplyDelete