Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (2024)

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Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (1)

For some reason, people think I eat out all the time. I like eating in restaurants, but I really like to cook make for myself and friends. When I do, I get to pick and choose exactly what I’m going to make, what I’m going to put into it, and how to cook it. I become the proverbial free man in Paris. At least in terms of cooking and baking.

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (2)

Working as a pâtissier for so many years, people assumed that I want or make complicated, fancy desserts bulging with buttercream and towering with spun sugar, foam, spheres, and powders strewn all over the place. While I appreciate the work and skill that goes into those kinds of things, I really like simple food, especially after a big meal. I’m happy with simplicity, especially when it involves finding the best fruit at the market and taking it home and doing as little to it as possible, so it shines in the best possible way.

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (3)

I’ve been writing a bit about Korean food, but Japanese cuisine is a pretty good example of how I like to eat. Japanese food shares something with French cuisine; start with good ingredients, and don’t over complicate them. Let the flavors shine.

I recently read Untangling My Chopsticks by Victoria Riccardi, about her studies of the food and ritual of tea kaiseki in Japan, and observed:“Through tea kaiseki I genuinely had come to believe that when you leave a meal, moment, or place not quite completely satisfied, you cherish it that much more because it was ephemeral and left you wanting.”

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (4)

That was an interesting observation and remembered when Alice Waters was kind enough to write an introduction to Room for Dessert, my first book. She compared my sensibility to a perfect glass of tangerine juice that she was served in Japan for dessert.It wasn’t complicated, but the cool-sweet sensation of that little glass of juice hit exactly the right note after dinner. I always find desserts like that to be the most appealing, too.

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (5)

Being citrus season, my market is exploding with colorful oranges sanguines. The merchants always slice a couple of blood oranges open and leave them facing outward, which act as a beacon to shoppers who marvel at their color, and can’t resist bringing a few home. When I started working at Chez Panisse back in the 1980’s, not many Americans had seen red-fleshed oranges, and customers were forever asking me, “How do you get the oranges that color?”

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (6)

At the time, we’d gotten ours from Italy, but times have changed and now blood oranges are grown in America, and depending on where you live, they’re readily available.If they’re not, I think they’re worth moving for.

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (7)

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Orange Sorbet

If you can't get blood oranges, this sorbet works very well with regular oranges, tangerines, or even grapefruit juice. Be sure to use freshly-squeezed juice for best results!If you want to add Champagne or sparkling wine, about 2 tablespoons per cup (250ml) is about right. A bit of wine will improve the consistency for the sorbet, which tend to freeze quite hard. If you leave it in the freezer and it gets too hard, let it soften at room temperature 5 to 10 minutes before serving. You can read my other Tips on Making Homemade Ice Cream Softer.And if you can bear to toss the peels away, they can be candied and just a few rinds will reward you with enough candied peels to last you months and months. I have a recipe to make those in my book, Ready for Dessert if you want to give them a try.

Servings 1 quart (1l)

  • 3 cups (700ml) freshly squeezed blood orange juice , (or regular orange juice)
  • 3/4 cup (150g) sugar
  • In a small nonreactive saucepan mix 1 cup (250ml) juice with sugar.

  • Stir over low heat until the sugar is dissolved.

  • Scrape the dissolved sugar and orange juice into the remaining 2 cups of blood orange juice.

  • Chill thoroughly, then freeze in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's directions.

Notes

Serving: This sorbet is terrific served shortly after serving and since it's natural, and there are no stabilizers or invert sugar (such as corn syrup), it will freeze harder than other sorbets if kept in the freezer. You may want to remove it from the freezer 5 to 10 minutes before scooping if it's too hard. You can also melt it down and rechurn it in your ice cream machine.

Blood Orange Sorbet Recipe (2024)
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