Dessert · Do-ahead · Fruit · Gluten Free

Slut Red Raspberries in Chardonnay Jello

You might think that no recipe could live up to this title. It’s a reasonable presumption, but thank God, a wrong one. This is heaven on the plate: the wine-soused raspberries take on a stained glass, lucent red, their very raspberry-ness enhanced; the soft, translucently pale coral just-set jelly in which they sit has a heady, floral fragrance that could make a grateful eater weep.

from Nigella Lawson’s “Forever Summer” recipe book

1 bottle Chardonnay, choose a good fruity variety. I love to use “Milou” French Chardonnay at $15.99 per bottle
12oz (300g) raspberries
1 vanilla pod, split lengthways (or 1 teaspoon vanilla extract)
5 gelatine leaves
9oz (250g) caster sugar
8oz double/heavy cream, to serve

Place the wine and berries in a bowl and allow to steep for half an hour at least.
Strain the wine into a saucepan and keep the raspberries to one side. Heat the wine with vanilla pod until nearly boiling and leave to steep on one side for 15 minutes.
Soak the gelatine leaves – which you can find in the supermarket these days – in cold water for about 5 minutes.
Remove the vanilla pod and reheat the wine stirring the sugar in until it dissolves; allow to boil if you want to lose the alcohol.
Add a third of the hot wine to the wrung-out gelatine leaves in a measuring jug and stir to dissolve, then add this mixture back into the rest of the wine and stir well. Strain into a large jug.
Place the raspberries, equally, into 6 flattish, clear glass serving bowls, and pour the strained wine over the top.
Allow to set in the fridge for at least 3 hours, though a day would be fine if you want to make this well ahead, and take out of the fridge 40 minutes before serving.
Serve with some double cream in a pitcher, and let people pour this into the fragrant, tender, fruit-jewelled jelly as they eat.

Baking · Chocolate · Do-ahead

Chocolate raspberry “pudding” cake

Nigella Lawson’s decadent but easy recipe

“I call this a pudding cake because its texture is simply a mixture between pudding and cake, though lighter by far than that could ever imply. Think, rather, of a mousse without fluffiness: this is dense but delicate with it. And it’s heavenly at blood heat, when the gooey chocolate sits warmly around the sour-sweet juicy raspberries embedded in the cake, like glinting, mud-covered garnets. This should be eaten an hour or so after it comes out of the oven. It gets more solid when cold, and loses some of that spectacular texture.
If you have any left, wrap it in foil and heat it up in the oven, or warm it up a slice at a time in the microwave before eating it.

Screen Shot 2020-07-08 at 7.14.18 AM
Photo by Jonathan Lovekin

Serves: 8

1½ cups self-rising flour
3 tbsp good unsweetened cocoa powder
1 cup plus 2 tbsp unsalted butter (plus more to grease cake tin – I use the butter wrapper)
1 tbsp Chambord (raspberry liqueur)
½ cup superfine sugar
½ cup light brown sugar
9 oz good bittersweet chocolate – 70% cocoa solids (broken into squares)
¾ cup black coffee and 185ml / ¾ cup water or 2 tsp instant coffee made up with 370ml / 1½ cups water
2 large eggs at room temperature (beaten slightly)
9 oz raspberries (plus lots more to serve)
approx. ½ teaspoon confectioners’ sugar (to serve)

You will need: a 22–23cm / 9-inch spring form cake tin.

Arrange the oven shelves so that one is in the middle for the cake, and another just below it. Slide a baking sheet onto the lower rack to catch any drips as the cake bakes. Heat the oven to 180°C/160°C Fan/350°F.
Butter a 22–23cm / 9-inch spring form cake tin and line the base with baking parchment. Mix the flour and unsweetened cocoa together in a bowl, and set aside.

Put the butter, liqueur, sugars, chocolate, coffee and water in a thick-bottomed saucepan and stir over low heat until everything melts and is thickly, glossily smooth. Remove the pan from the heat, and let stand for a couple of minutes.

Stir the flour and cocoa mixture into the pan, and beat well – just with a spatula or wooden spoon – until all is smooth and glossy again, then gradually beat in the eggs. The mixture will be runny: don’t panic, and don’t add more flour; the chocolate itself sets as it cooks and then cools.
Pour into the prepared tin until you have covered the base with about 2cm of the mixture (which will be about half of it) and then cover with the raspberries and pour the rest of the mixture on top. You may have to push some of the raspberries back under the cake batter by hand.

Put into the preheated oven and bake for 40–45 minutes. Don’t try and test by poking in a skewer as you don’t want it to come out clean: the gunge is what the cake is about. But when it’s cooked, the top will be firm, and slightly cracked. Don’t worry about that: a little confectioners’ sugar will deflect attention. When it’s ready, take the cake out of the oven and put on a rack. Leave in the tin for 15 minutes before removing the sides of the tin; the cake must stay on its base.

When you’re just about to eat – and this should be around an hour after the cake’s come out of the oven – dust with a little confectioners’ sugar pushed through a tea strainer. Serve with lots more fresh raspberries, and Greek yoghurt, whipped double cream or crème fraîche as wished.

Dessert · Do-ahead

Raspberry, sherry and nut trifle

A simple, quick and delicious trifle, updated with amaretti biscuits and chopped toasted hazelnuts.

Screen Shot 2020-04-02 at 1.47.27 PM

Serves 6

250g (9oz) bag of amaretti biscuits
Sweet sherry
150g (6oz) punnet raspberries + more for decoration
Icing sugar
500g (18oz) tub of crème anglaise or vanilla custard
284ml (10oz) whipped fresh double cream
Chopped toasted hazelnuts
Fresh mint leaves

Spill a box of amaretti biscuits into the bottom of a large glass bowl.
Sprinkle well with a sweet sherry.
Use a fork to crush 100g (4oz)raspberries with icing sugar to taste, then spoon over the soaked biscuits.
Add a few more whole raspberries.
Spoon over a large tub of crème anglaise or vanilla custard and top with plenty of whipped fresh double cream.
Decorate with whole raspberries, chopped toasted hazelnuts and fresh mint leaves.