Sunday, 12 April 2026

Want something lighter ...

... and love lemons? Here's an alternative to those heavier desserts!

You've three versions :


Version 1 :


Lemon Pots


Makes 6 x 160ml glasses


600ml double cream

150g caster sugar

finely grated zest and juice of 3 lemons **


Raspberries to serve


small glass dishes or shot glasses


Heat the cream, sugar and lemon zest in a wide-based pan over a low heat until at simmering point. Stir continuously for about 3 minutes until the sugar has dissolved. Remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly until lukewarm.

Mix the lemon juice with the cooled cream in the pan and stir.

Pour the lemon cream into the glasses – two thirds full - transfer to the fridge to set for a minimum of 2 hours. This is based on a shot glass of 160ml.

When set and ready to serve arrange the raspberries on top.


** If you don't have fresh lemons you can use juice and omit the zest – 4 tbsp of juice is equivalent to one and a half lemons – 8 tbsp for this recipe.


Version 2 :


OR, you can omit the raspberries and make :


Cherry and Raspberry Compote


350g cherries, stoned – can use frozen

150g caster sugar

juice of 1 lemon

150g raspberries – can use frozen

4 tbsp water or juice from defrosted fruit


Pour the water into a pan and add the cherries, sugar and lemon juice. Place the on a medium heat and stir until the sugar dissolves. Cook the cherries over a low heat for 5-10 minutes until they have released some juice but are not overcooked. If you are using frozen cherries you will have the fruit juices when defrosted – use this juice instead of the water.

Add the raspberries to the pan and cook for a further 1-2 minutes until they start to soften. Remove the pan from the heat and leave the mixture to cool, then chill it well before serving.


You can keep the compote as is or blitz in a processor and pass through a sieve – purely a matter of personal preference – some people aren't fond of raspberry pips.

The compote in itself is versatile – you can use it as a topping over vanilla ice cream, over breakfast cereal – great with granola!

Here we're using the compote as the next tier for the lemon pots.


Version 3 :


I'm using Amaretti biscuits – moreish, delicious Italian biscuits - crush two per shot glass – approximately 23g – the size of the biscuits will vary.

Pour a layer of compote onto the lemon pot – after it has had time to set – complete with crushed Amaretti biscuits, just before serving.

Photos next!


Wednesday, 8 April 2026

The extra mile – the ice cream!

I always seem to plan my menus in reverse, with ideas for desserts first!

There's nothing that will serve you better than a home-made ice cream and all my recipes are of the “no-churn” variety. I use the standard vanilla ice-cream base recipe to begin :


Vanilla ice cream


Prep – 5 minutes

Total time – 5 minutes


plus freezing at least 6-8 hours

or until firm


Gives you 1.6 litres of ice cream is equal

to 18 scoops


1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk

1 x 600ml double cream

2tsp vanilla bean paste


Put the condensed milk, cream and vanilla into a large mixing bowl and beat with an electric hand whisk until the mixture is quite thick and stiff, then decant into smallish containers.


To serve – remove from the freezer and allow to soften.


Serve with the cake, drizzle and a scoop of ice cream.

The genius of this idea is that you can freeze it, each element alleviating the stress on the day.

I took a risk and served this at a dinner party, not knowing two of my guests' taste, thankfully it went down a storm!

Next … a lemon recipe

Sunday, 5 April 2026

First up … Orange drizzle

This cake is moist – moist is good but to dress the cake I would make extra “drizzle” to serve with the Gateau a l'Orange.


Orange Drizzle


200g icing sugar


250ml orange juice – no bits


Put the sugar and orange juice in a small saucepan and heat gently so that the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and simmer on a low heat for 10 minutes.


Hey presto, that's all there is to it, a syrupy drizzle and you've turned your cake into a supper or dinner party dessert – serve with a spoonful of clotted cream or vanilla ice cream.


Here's the drizzle cooling :



and again with the cake



or, if you'd prefer to give your guests a choice,

serve the drizzle in small jugs




This is so easy and delicious!

I've frozen the syrup too so that's another task completed.

Finally, the extra mile … the ice cream

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Magical oranges – here's the photo guide …

 





Take it from someone who doesn't “do cake” - this is the exception.

Now for the extra bits that takes it to the next level …