Coffee is our first drink of the day and we've spent quite some time
trying to find one we really like. Recently and thanks to my
brother-in-law, who is also a big coffee devotee, we found a new one, in
bean form. So, I thought I'd put it to the test with an idea I dreamed up as an alternative to the famous gâteau version; a cherry mocha-chocolate sundae which comprises:
- Coffee ice cream
- Coffee with dark chocolate ripple and chocolate chip ice cream
- Coffee and dark chocolate sauce
- Coffee and cocoa truffles ....and
- Cherries
A Dip Into Coffee History
The
picture of the sundae left, is taken in front of an engraving
that hangs in our kitchen, it's of the Jamaica Coffee Tavern circa.
1885. This was one of the first of the very popular London coffee houses
and was opened in 1666 after the Great Fire. Coffee taverns in their
thousands, sprung up and prospered throughout the country, after the
introduction of coffee to Britain from Italy and Turkey in the early
17th century. They provided a venue, where, for the price of a penny
entrance fee, people could meet and enjoy local and international
gossip. They could also read the current newspapers and journals, take
coffee and sandwiches and most unusually for such a hierarchical
society, enjoy them on an equal footing, no matter who they were or what
they did outside its walls. The only proviso being that the coffee
houses usually catered for men, although there is some debate about
this, as although coffee houses were sometimes owned by women, they were
not socially acceptable for them but that is not to say that women did
not frequent them.
In university towns such as Oxford, the coffee
house became an alternative place of information gathering, debate and
exchange of ideas and knowledge, in fact they were known as the 'penny
universities'. A tavern where the patrons were drinking coffee rather
than alcohol, allowed them to continue to read and converse with ease,
rather than in the rowdy gin shops of the period. This did not mean
however, that heated arguments didn't occur but when they did, patrons
were expected to forget and forgive and buy each other a coffee. Many of
the houses were involved in trade and shipping and were also the
foundation for businesses and institutions, such as Lloyds of London and
the London Stock Exchange. Coffee Taverns remained popular but over the
centuries and as they became ever more fashionable, they began to take
on a more narrow, exclusive membership with individual political
affiliation and so evolved into the 'gentlemen's, business and
political clubs of today. This coupled with the fact that both the
government and the East India Company began to champion tea as the
fashionable British drink.
A Foreword About the Recipe and Ingredients
As
the basis on which to build my coffee/mocha sundae I'm using my favourite custard-based ice cream recipe from 1865. I add my flavours for this sundae after the third 'breaking of the ice crystal' stage of ice cream making.
I'm adding desiccated coconut
and coconut oil to my coffee truffles but that is because I do not have
any dried cherries at the moment but I usually do make truffles with
all kinds of dried fruits, it gives them a really luscious taste. If
however, you do have dried fruits to compliment this sundae then use
them instead and replace the coconut oil with more butter.
In order to have sufficient to cover all the recipes, I made:
1 cup - ½ a pint - 250 ml of coffee from 2 tablespoons of beans
½cup - 3½oz - 100g raw blonde cane sugar
½cup - ¼ of a pint - 125ml of my triple strength coffee
Add all the ingredients to your pan.
Put the pan on a low heat and stir constantly until the chocolate and the sugar have melted into the coffee.
Remove from heat and stir vigorously to obtain a glossy sauce.
To the second half I added a handful of chocolate chips and I swirled in three quarters of my cooled mocha sauce.
I now had my two flavours in one box and returned it to the freezer for its final freezing.
N.B. how long it takes for your freezer to achieve this stage will depend on your individual freezer. I left mine for several hours, even over night in the first stage.
This is a recipe I sort of made up. Every-time we feel like something sweet to go with a coffee I tend to make a batch of these truffles and I always add coffee but just taken from the cafetière, so at the normal strength. This time however, I wanted the full coffee flavour to predominate, so I used my triple strength brew, I also used a heart-shaped cookie cutter to create the truffles, rather than just making small ball-shaped ones. These truffles take the place of the cake in the Black Forest Sundae.
1 tablespoon of cocoa
2 tablespoons of desiccated coconut
2 tablespoons of coconut or blonde raw cane sugar
2 dessertspoons of butter
1 dessert spoon of raw coconut oil
2 dessertspoons of warm triple-strength coffee
extra cocoa for dusting
grated plain/dark chocolate for decorating
Put
all the ingredients into a bowl and pour the coffee over them. Using a
fork, mash the ingredients together until well mixed and leave aside to
set.
Prepare a freezer-proof tray by lining it with baking paper.
When the mixture has cooled, dip the cutter in cocoa powder and then taking a small walnut-sized amount of truffle mixture and using the cutter as a mould, press it evenly into the cutter.
Put the cutter down on the baking paper and gently press the mixture out.
Repeat until you have made the amount of shapes you require.
I used the rest of the mix to make some small round traditional-shape truffles.
I then placed the tray inside a freezer bag and put it in the freezer.
Composing A Sundae for Two
I drained my jar of cherries and got ready my large martini glass.
I started with a layer of the Morello cherries, they are quite tart so make a great foil to the rest of the sundae.
I then added 4 small scoops of coffee ice cream, then some mocha sauce and then just a few more cherries before building up a pyramid of Mocha ripple/chocolate chip and Coffee ice cream scoops.
I placed cherries around the perimeter and added some more Mocha sauce and a few of the round truffles.
On the top I placed one heart-shaped truffle dusted with chocolate and threaded through a cocktail stick with a cherry atop. I added another un-dusted heart-shaped truffle to give a contrasting colour and texture. It also was threaded through with a cocktail stick. I then added a round dusted truffle - the rest of the truffles can be served at the same time or left for later!
I really loved making this sundae and I hope you will too.
All the very best,
Sue
© Sue Cross 2021
Brewing Up
I decided reading through my recipe books that a concentration of coffee at 3 to 4 times more than our usual morning brew would be the best to give me a good flavour for both the ice cream, truffles and mocha sauce.In order to have sufficient to cover all the recipes, I made:
1 cup - ½ a pint - 250 ml of coffee from 2 tablespoons of beans
Mocha Sauce
This is a very easy but delicious sauce and it is again an old Victorian recipe. I find the modern recipes I've looked at for coffee sauces seem to boil the ingredients together, which I personally don't like. I think coffee and chocolate need to be heated gently both from a taste and a health point of view.Ingredients
¼cup - 2oz - 50g of dark/plain chocolate½cup - 3½oz - 100g raw blonde cane sugar
½cup - ¼ of a pint - 125ml of my triple strength coffee
Method
Break up the chocolate.Add all the ingredients to your pan.
Put the pan on a low heat and stir constantly until the chocolate and the sugar have melted into the coffee.
Remove from heat and stir vigorously to obtain a glossy sauce.
Building On the Rich Vanilla Recipe - Coffee Ice Cream Duo
To one half of a litre of the vanilla ice cream, I added ¼cup - ⅛ of a pint - 65ml of my triple strength cooled coffee and whisked it until it was well mixed.To the second half I added a handful of chocolate chips and I swirled in three quarters of my cooled mocha sauce.
I now had my two flavours in one box and returned it to the freezer for its final freezing.
N.B. how long it takes for your freezer to achieve this stage will depend on your individual freezer. I left mine for several hours, even over night in the first stage.
The Mocha Coffee Truffles
This is a recipe I sort of made up. Every-time we feel like something sweet to go with a coffee I tend to make a batch of these truffles and I always add coffee but just taken from the cafetière, so at the normal strength. This time however, I wanted the full coffee flavour to predominate, so I used my triple strength brew, I also used a heart-shaped cookie cutter to create the truffles, rather than just making small ball-shaped ones. These truffles take the place of the cake in the Black Forest Sundae.
Ingredients
(makes 10-11)1 tablespoon of cocoa
2 tablespoons of desiccated coconut
2 tablespoons of coconut or blonde raw cane sugar
2 dessertspoons of butter
1 dessert spoon of raw coconut oil
2 dessertspoons of warm triple-strength coffee
extra cocoa for dusting
grated plain/dark chocolate for decorating
Method
Put
all the ingredients into a bowl and pour the coffee over them. Using a
fork, mash the ingredients together until well mixed and leave aside to
set.Prepare a freezer-proof tray by lining it with baking paper.
When the mixture has cooled, dip the cutter in cocoa powder and then taking a small walnut-sized amount of truffle mixture and using the cutter as a mould, press it evenly into the cutter.
Put the cutter down on the baking paper and gently press the mixture out.
Repeat until you have made the amount of shapes you require.
I used the rest of the mix to make some small round traditional-shape truffles.
I then placed the tray inside a freezer bag and put it in the freezer.
Composing A Sundae for Two
I started with a layer of the Morello cherries, they are quite tart so make a great foil to the rest of the sundae.
I then added 4 small scoops of coffee ice cream, then some mocha sauce and then just a few more cherries before building up a pyramid of Mocha ripple/chocolate chip and Coffee ice cream scoops.
I placed cherries around the perimeter and added some more Mocha sauce and a few of the round truffles.
On the top I placed one heart-shaped truffle dusted with chocolate and threaded through a cocktail stick with a cherry atop. I added another un-dusted heart-shaped truffle to give a contrasting colour and texture. It also was threaded through with a cocktail stick. I then added a round dusted truffle - the rest of the truffles can be served at the same time or left for later!
I really loved making this sundae and I hope you will too.
If
you enjoyed this recipe then please feel free to comment and share it
with your friends and on social media. Maybe also think about joining this blog
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Patreon or
It all helps to keep me going!
Hope to see you here again for another recipe from an old farmhouse in Normandie,
All the very best,
Sue
© Sue Cross 2021