How to make the perfect chocolate sorbet – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect… (2024)

Chocolate sorbet may seem a contradiction in terms; chocolate is such a classic pairing with dairy that divorcing them feels like cruelty. In fact, much as I love ice-cream of all varieties, in this case, the absence of extra fat allows the chocolate to take centre stage, making for a purer, more intense cocoa hit. If chocolate ice-cream is best licked from the bottom of a leaky cone on a sunny seaside afternoon, chocolate sorbet belongs in an elegant quenelle at the end of dinner – two different, but equally lovely pleasures. Not often seen in the shops (fortunately), it’s happily very easy to make, assuming you have an ice-cream machine (sorry).

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The chocolate

The most significant difference between the recipes I try comes in the means by which they achieve their chocolate flavour. Some, such as the much-recommended sorbet from David Lebovitz’s The Perfect Scoop, use three times as much chocolate as cocoa powder; some, such as the one in Hannah Kaminsky’s book, Vegan Desserts, use nearly twice as much cocoa as chocolate; and others use either chocolate alone (Linda Tubby’s Ices Italia) or just cocoa (The River Cafe).

Chocolate contains cocoa powder, of course, mixed with cocoa butter, while cocoa powder also contains a small amount of cocoa butter – which one you opt for depends on what sort of sorbet you’re after. Lebovitz and Tubby’s have a sweet, crowd-pleasing richness, while the more cocoa-heavy examples have a simpler but more powerful flavour. If you’re looking for a vegan substitute for chocolate ice-cream (and don’t want to substitute alternative dairy), then I’d recommend using Lebovitz’s excellent recipe, but if you want something distinctly different, light in texture and heavy on taste, I think cocoa is the way to go.

One of the hardest things about any ice, however, is getting the texture right – Lebovitz uses a blender to hom*ogenise the mixture before freezing, while Morfudd Richards and the River Cafe pass the sorbet mix through a sieve to remove any lumps. With regard to cocoa specifically, it’s also important not only to bloom it in boiling water for the best possible flavour, but to give it time to “cook out”, as the River Cafe’s recipe makes clear, to prevent a powdery, chalky consistency in the finished product. Do not neglect Lebovitz’s tip to use the largest pan you have, either, because, as I found to my cost, it really does boil quite enthusiastically.

The sugars

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I say sugars, because although everyone uses standard caster sugar, some deploy it in unusual ways – particularly important here, because, as Max Falkowitz notes on Serious Eats, “sugar doesn’t just sweeten sorbet – it’s also responsible for sorbet’s structure”, it lowers the freezing point of the water in which it’s dissolved. Richards uses a partially inverted stock syrup in her book Lola’s Ice Creams & Sundaes, which sounds complicated, but is, in fact, just a sugar syrup with a little cream of tartar added, and liquid glucose, which inhibits the formation of large ice or sucrose crystals for a smoother end result. It also adds body and lowers the freezing point, making the sorbet easier to scoop – but, crucially, it doesn’t taste as good with cocoa as alcohol, which is your other option to stop your sorbet turning to stone in the freezer. Richards suggests vodka and the River Cafe brandy, in unnervingly generous quantities. I like the scoopability, and the flavour combination, but I’m going to reduce the amount, so there’s just a hint of booze alongside the bittersweet cocoa. If you’d prefer to avoid it altogether, give glucose syrup a try instead.

Martha Rose Shulman in the New York Times adds honey as well as sugar, but my testers and I can’t taste it in the finished sorbet, and it doesn’t seem to have helped soften it. Kaminsky, meanwhile, bases her sorbet on a caramel, rather than a simple sugar syrup, which gives it a pleasantly toffeeish complexity that proves popular with testers – like a very grown-up frozen Rolo.

The extras

Interestingly, many restaurants (including another version from the River Cafe), include dairy, usually milk, and sometimes egg white in their sorbet recipes – I decide not to try any of these, because I think most people expect their sorbets to be dairy-free, but I assume it adds body, and is no doubt as delicious as all chocolate ices seem to be.

Though I’ve chosen to stick with the classic vanilla, chocolate goes so well with other flavours that you can get quite creative with the basic recipe below. Shulman includes peppermint essence and steeps a mint teabag in the mixture, in homage to a dessert at one of her favourite Parisian restaurants, Au Trou Gascon, which does, as she says, infuse “the thrill and depth of any dark chocolate dessert … with a light, refreshing quality”, and Linda Tubby uses a proportion of chilli chocolate to add a subtle heat to her sorbet. If you have a yen to experiment – with orange zest, perhaps, or ground cardamom or coffee – feel free, but bear in mind that flavours are dulled by freezing, so you may wish to add a little more than tastes wise at room temperature.

The churning

Much of the pleasure of this recipe is, in my opinion, the silky texture, so I think you really do need an ice-cream maker for it, sorry. (And if you want to give it a try with the still freezing method, please let me know how it works out.)

Perfect chocolate sorbet

Prep 5 min
Cook 15 min
Cool and chill 2 hr+
Churn About 20 min
Makes 600ml

100g cocoa powder
175g sugar
½ tsp salt
750ml water
30ml brandy or golden rum
1 tsp vanilla extract

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Put the cocoa, sugar, salt and water in a tall pan (it will bubble up, so the type of pan is important), stir to combine, then put on a medium-high heat and bring to a boil, whisking, until smooth. Leave to bubble away for about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally so it doesn’t catch and burn.

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Stir in the alcohol, then take the pan off the heat and add the vanilla extract. Leave the mix to cool slightly, pass through a fine sieve, leave to cool completely, then chill thoroughly for at least two hours.

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Once chilled, whisk again until smooth, then churn in an ice-cream maker until smooth and frozen – depending on your machine, you may then need to freeze it for a couple of more hours before use, or you may be able to serve it immediately. Once frozen, store in a sealed container in the freezer, and remove at least 15 minutes before serving, to give it a chance to soften.

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  • Chocolate sorbet: chocolate ice-cream’s more serious cousin, or its more boring one? What do you like to pair with it (poached pears are, in fact, a lovely match), and if you’ve eaten a truly memorable example, tell us where!

  • Felicity Cloake’s new book, Red Sauce Brown Sauce: A British Breakfast Odyssey, is published by HarperCollins at £16.99. To order a copy for £14.78, go to guardianbookshop.com

How to make the perfect chocolate sorbet – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect… (2024)

FAQs

What is chocolate sorbet made of? ›

Here's everything you need: cocoa powder, water, sugar, and a pinch of salt. Cocoa Powder: I highly recommend using Dutch process cocoa powder for the chocolate sorbet. It tastes smoother and less acidic, with a darker color and much deeper chocolate flavor.

What makes sorbet creamy? ›

Without fat from dairy or eggs, it's the suspension of sugar within the fruit purée that allows the sorbet to churn into something with a creamy mouthfeel. You need 20-30% sugar in your sorbet, which will come from your fruit plus some added sugar.

How the sorbet is done? ›

Sorbet is essentially made of a simple sugar syrup, infused with fruit puree or juice or another flavoring agent like coffee or chocolate, that is then chilled and churned.

Is chocolate sorbet better than ice cream? ›

Sorbet has less calories than ice cream and other frozen desserts, and no fat. It's fruit content also makes it rich in vitamin C. Any downsides? That fruit content also means it contains a fair bit of sugar, and if we're comparing it with ice cream and gelato, it has less calcium, vitamin A and iron.

Why put egg white in sorbet? ›

The optional egg white helps to stabilize, emulsify, and preserve the texture of the sorbet if you are going to keep it in your freezer for a few days.

What is the secret of a good sorbet? ›

Sugar plays a larger roll in the sorbet than just sweetening the fruit juice. It's also crucial for the sorbet's texture. Too little sugar and the sorbet becomes icy, too much and it can be slushy — hit the sugar level just right and the sorbet will taste creamy and melt evenly across your tongue.

How do you keep sorbet creamy? ›

That's why pastry chefs look to liquid sugar like invert sugar, glucose, or dextrose, which all make sorbet creamier when used properly. The easiest alternative sugar—the one you can find in any American supermarket—is plain 'ol non-high-fructose corn syrup. Trust me: It's lemon sorbet's best friend.

Why is my homemade sorbet so hard? ›

The problem is usually that after it is frozen it is too icy. To combat the iciness sorbets will include either alcohol or a lot of sugar. If you are confident that you are freezing your mixture as much as you should then perhaps you could reduce the sugar or alcohol in the recipe to encourage solidification.

How do you make sorbet not icy? ›

Too little sweetener and your sorbet will be icy; too much sweetener and it will be mushy. Churn or stir your sorbet while it's freezing to prevent large ice crystals from forming. Please note the “Easy (no keep)” method doesn't require any sweetener or churning/stirring.

Can sorbet melt? ›

Ice cream and sorbet, even when kept tightly sealed, eventually turn icy and exhibit freezer burn due to the temperature swings created when the freezer door is opened and closed, which cause them to continuously melt and refreeze.

Are eggs in sorbet? ›

"Sorbet is made with fruit but no dairy (eggs or milk/cream) so it's generally vegan-friendly and suits those with egg or dairy allergies, too," she says.

What keeps sorbet soft? ›

1 to 2 tablespoons liqueur (this is for flavor, but it also prevents the sorbet from freezing solid. Alcohol won't freeze, so it is great insurance that you will have a soft sorbet. BUT, if you add too much sorbet won't freeze at all and you will basically have a margarita or daiquiri!)

What if my sorbet is too sweet? ›

While the intention is usually to create a sweet flavor, there are occasions when a sorbet mixture turns out a tad too sugary. Thankfully, there are ways to temper the sweetness in sorbets. If it's too sweet, all it takes is the addition of highly acidic ingredients like lemon or vinegar, some water, or more fruit.

What is the most expensive sorbet? ›

The ice cream, called “Byakuya,” is a combination of white truffles imported from Alba, Italy; Parmigiano Reggiano cheese; and sake lees, a byproduct of the sake production process. The resulting frozen dessert costs an absolutely eye-watering ¥873,400 ($6,696) for a single 130 mL (4.4 ounce) serving.

What is the difference between chocolate sorbet and gelato? ›

Texture and taste: Gelato has a velvety, melt-in-your-mouth texture that makes taste buds sing. It is much denser and thicker than sorbet because of the dairy and the slower churning process, making it less airy.

Does chocolate sorbet contain dairy? ›

Sorbet, a fruit ice typically made with water, sugar, and fruit purée, is a delicious vehicle for chocolate, as well. You'd never guess this rich, creamy, frozen confection is dairy-free.

Is sorbet actually healthy? ›

For those who need dairy- or gluten-free dessert options, or who cannot eat eggs or nuts, sorbet may be a suitable option. In theory, a fruit sorbet is healthy, but most commercial varieties are based on sugar rather than fruit.

Is sorbet actually ice cream? ›

The difference between ice cream and sorbet is also based on whether or not dairy is used. Technically speaking, ice cream always contains cream and/or milk as its main ingredients, while sorbet traditionally never includes dairy or eggs, instead being primarily made from fruit juice or fruit purée.

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