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Sour Cherries, That Is
My mother-in-law of fruitcake fame also made a divine sour cherry pie with a flaky Crisco crust, barely golden and with a dreamy not-too-runny filling. I tried it a couple of times, failed, and put sour cherries out of my mind, although they stayed firmly riveted in my husband’s thoughts. Competing against the childhood food memories of your spouse is a losing game, I have learned. The only sour cherry recipe I repeated was an almost all-day affair making Canard A La Montmorency, which I learned from my French cooking mentor, Mary Bond. That, however, is a project and another post for cooler weather.
It was a long time before I tried creating sour cherry desserts again. But this cake and ice cream combo changed all that. Both recipes reside in one of Domenica Marchetti’s first cookbooks, Big Night In , now sadly AOOP*. These two magnificent recipes are her own invention, and they do not hail from Abruzzo, the province of her mother and the inspiration for some of the dishes you see on her website and cookbooks. Domenica told me she was motivated by the abundance of sour cherries grown in Michigan where she lived when she was a beginning journalist . You can use the ones called Griottes, Montmorency, Morello or Amarena with excellent results. I always add a a bit of French sour cherry essence that we used to carry in the shop and is now available from Simply Gourmand. This cake and ice cream are so good that I pit and freeze a couple of flats of sour cherries from a local farm stand every year (individually on a tray and then packed in bags) just to reproduce this cheery concoction in the dreary JanFebs.
Mechanical Details of Sour Cherries
I use a cherry pitter from Westmark in Germany. It has no plastic parts (which always get destroyed in my kitchen) and is made of aluminum with powder coating so that it can be thrown mercilessly in your dishwasher. Domenica uses a paper clip and shows you how in this Instagram video
I make a lot of frozen desserts and was gifted by the other ice cream lover in the house (he did extensive research) with aMusso ice cream maker. It’s been in almost constant use but has never broken down for over fifteen years. You just pour your cooled sorbet, granita, or ice cream mixture in the bowl, turn on the timer and beater buttons and that’s it. Most mixtures take less than 30 minutes to get to the stage where they are ready to be stored in your freezer. When you are finished, wipe out the bowl with damp cloth, wash the beater and you’re done. It has a stainless steel housing, bowl and blade. Even though it is an investment, it’s sturdiness soars above two previous ones with plastic parts, which broke down in less than five years.
A shortcut to cooking the combined yolk mixture and milk/ cream mixture, is that once you have combined the two, if your instant read thermometer reads between 175 -180F, you are at the perfect temperature for the custard base and do not need to heat again. Put the container you are going to use to keep the ice cream in the freezer while the ice cream is churning. This will keep the mixture from melting as you scoop it out from the ice cream maker. Make Domenics’s chocolate sauce too, as it provides the perfect balance to the sour cherry ice cream. I prefer glucose to corn syrup, as it has less water and is less sweet than the corn syrups – or substitute a cane syrup. When you eat this gelato with its sauce, you’ll comprehend that much-bandied-about term umami.
For the cake, I prefer using a metal mold (it must be a mold with a tube in the center as this is a large dense cake). Non-stick molds will not give you the same golden crisp crust. Grease it with butter and sprinkle flour or almond powder throughout the interior, and your cake will release beautifully. The cake can be covered and left at room temperature for three days, but if there is any left after that, wrap it in cling film or foil and refrigerate. I have even frozen slices for emergency sour cherry attacks. I always test cakes with an instant read thermometer and not a toothpick. This one really needs to be about 205-210F on my Thermapen.
*Alas Out Of Print
- 1 1/2 cups (340gr)unsalted butter at room temperature, plus more to grease the cake pan
- 3 cups (375gr) unbleached white all purpose flour
- 2 cups sour cherries (280gr), pitted and halved
- 3 1/2 cups (790gr) white granulated sugar - I use India Tree Caster Sugar
- 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 6 large eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract or 1/2 teaspoon French vanilla essence
- 8 ounces (227gr) mascarpone (sour cream can be substituted)
- Confectioners' sugar for dusting
- Preheat oven to 325F (160C).
- You will need a cake pan with a central tube (angel food cake pan, bundt pan etc) which will hold 10-12 cups (2 1/3 - 2 3/4L)
- Lightly butter and flour the interior - I sometimes use almond powder instead of flour.
- In a small bowl, mix the cherries with 1/2 cup (115gr) caster sugar and allow it to steep while preparing the cake batter.
- In a medium bowl, mix together the flour and the salt.
- Put 1 1/2 cups butter (340gr) in the bowl of a stand mixer and beat briefly to soften.
- Add the remaining 3 cups (675gr) of sugar, a scoop at a time, and beat at high speed until light and airy - about 5 minutes.
- Add the eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition, and scraping down the sides of the bowl as necessary.
- Beat in the vanilla and lower the beater speed to add the flour and mascarpone in alternating increments, starting and ending with the flour.
- Gently mix the batter to make sure all ingredients are evenly incorporated.
- Drain the cherries, reserving the syrup that collects in the bowl, and fold them into the batter.
- Pour the batter into the pan, and shake the pan to even it out.
- Bake at least 75 minutes in the preheated oven - the top should be a deep golden color and the interior temperature should be 210F or 99C.
- While the cake is baking, put the reserved cherry syrup in a small saucepan and boil at a high temperature for a few minutes until it is thickened.
- Strain and reserve this reduced syrup to brush onto the unmolded cake while still warm.
- When the cake is done, place the pan on a cake rack and allow to cool for 20 minutes before unmolding. - you may have to loosen the sides and tube of he pan with a thin knife or spatula.
- Brush the tops and sides of the unmolded cake with the syrup while warm.
- Transfer to cake plate and sieve some confectioners' sugar on top before serving.
- 1 1/2 cups (356ml)whole milk
- 1 1/2 cups (356ml)heavy cream
- 1 whole vanilla bean split (I use 1/2 teaspoon vanilla essence from Grasse)
- 6 large egg yolks
- 3/4 cups superfine sugar (170gr) - I use India Tree Caster Sugar
- Pinch of fine sea salt
- 4 1/2 cups (690gr) pitted sour cherries, halved
- 1/2 cup (114gr) granulated sugar
- For the Bittersweet Chocolate - Sour Cherry Sauce
- 2 tablesppons (15gr) pure cocoa powder - I use Cocoa Barry Brut
- 1/3 cup (79ml)heavy cream
- 1 cup (237ml) light corn syrup - I prefer to use glucose
- 8 ounces (227gr) best quality bittersweet chocolate, chopped - I use Valrhona Oriado
- 3 tablespoons (60gr) salted butter
- 1 tablespoon Kirsch
- Place the milk and cream in a heavy saucepan and scrape the seeds from the vanilla pod into the mixture - add the vanilla pod as well
- (I add the Vanilla Essence from Grasse after the mixture is finished cooking)
- Bring the milk and cream just to a boil - do not let it boil over - and then remove from heat.
- In a mixer bowl, whixk the egg yolks with the superfine sugar and salt until the mixture is thick and light colored like a mayonnaise.
- Whisk a small amount of the hot cream/milk mixture into the eggs to set the temperature and then slowly add the rest of the hot cream/milk- the resting temperature of the final mixture should be 175-180F.
- If you are returning the mixture to the heat, stir constantly with a wood spoon until that temperature is reached, or the mixture is thick enough to lightly coat the back of your spoon.
- Discard the vanilla pod if used, or add the vanilla essence and then cover with cling and chill thoroughly.
- Place e cups of the cherries and the nremaining 1/2 cup sugar in a medium sized saucepan.
- Bring the cherries to a simmer over medium heat and cook over medium heat until the sugar has melted and the cherries are soft.
- Pass the cherries through a food mill fitted with te finest disk and then strain this purée through a mesh strainer.and discard the solids.
- You should have 1 1/2 cups of liquid which you will bring to a simmer in a small saucepan.
- Reduce this to 1gou5 1 cup, then remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature.
- Stir this cherry syrup into the cold i.gelato mixture, and freeze according to your ice cream machine instructions.
- Then fold inthe 1 1/2 cups reserved cherries and transfer to a tightly lidded contaier and freeze until hard.
- For the chocolate sauce
- In a medium sized saucepan, whisk together the cocoa and heavy cream until smooth.
- Place your pan over medium heat and stir in the corn syrup (or glucose or cane syrup), chocolate and butter.
- Gently stir with a whisk until the chocolate has melted.
- Bring the sauce to a boil and reduce heat to medium low and allow the sauce to simmer gently until a sauce consistency is achieved.
- Remove the sauce from heat and cool for 5 minutes before adding Kirsch.
- Serve the cherry gelato with the chocolate sauce poured over the top.
- I add a 1/4 - 1/2 teaspoon French Sour Cherry Essence.
- I keep powdered glucose and make a syrup (70gr glucose powder to 30gr water and boil together until clear).
- You can use cane syrup as a substitute for the corn syrup or glucose.
- Both the gelato and sauce can be made a week ahead before serving. you can reheat the sauce in a heavy saucepan or in a double boiler before serving.
After owning one of the best cooking stores in the US for 47 years, Nancy Pollard writes a blog about food in all its aspects – recipes, film, books, travel, superior sources and food related issues.
City slicker here. Are there suitable substitutes for fresh dour cherries?
Frozen cherries are available. Montmorency is the variety that sometimes appears on the label. Start a recipe with semi thawed fruit, not frozen
Hello Catherine,
Thanks for writing that advice. I found the Montmorency ones also in two grocery stores.
Nancy
Hello Ann,
Catherine Randolph is right, there are several options in the frozen sour cherries division. They are always pitted – a big plus. Montmorancy is the type that I find in my go-to grocery store. I know that dour is a typo, but from now on I am going to call them dour cherries!
Nancy
Big Night In may be out of print, but the internet makes it easy to find used copies of it & other books you’ve recommended (such as the Gourmet compilations). And the prices are usually very reasonable.
I had to to get a replacement for my Big Night In as it was in shreds and I too used the used book vendors with a great result.
Nancy
A simpler dessert is cherries clafoutis. I use sweet cherries for that but sour might fly. I use Julia Child’s recipe.
Your Musso recommendation, had it come a few years earlier, might have been the choice. Now you’ve ruined the notion that my compressor Breville model is the preferred home ice cream machine.
Hello David,
Yes, there is always a better appliance just when you have decided that yours is just dandy. I recently bought a Breville food processor, after I trashed my Robot Coupe. And I was happy until I read reviews that a couple of others were better.
Nancy