Salted caramel semifreddo


This semifreddo is very good served just as it is, but also works well with a poached pear, and is surprisingly excellent served with a dollop of honey and a drizzle of tahini. Begin this recipe at least seven hours before you’d like to serve it, to give everything time to chill.

  • Autumn 2024
  • Recipes
  • Read Time: 3 mins

Ingredients


Serves: 10

• 700ml thickened cream
• Salted caramel
• 200g caster sugar
• 100g unsalted butter, diced
• 300ml cream
• A pinch of flaky sea salt 

Sabayon
• 12 egg yolks
• 100g caster sugar

Method


1. For the salted caramel, combine the sugar and 100ml water in a heavy-based saucepan over medium heat and cook, without stirring, brushing down the sides with a little water from time to time until you have a very dark caramel, bordering on too dark. The added bitterness from the caramel helps to pull this dessert back from the brink of being too sweet.

2. Carefully add the butter and stir until melted and combined, then add the cream. Bring to a simmer for a minute to make sure all the sugar has dissolved, then add flaky sea salt. Make it quite salty; it needs more than you think to balance all the other parts of the dish. Cool this completely in the fridge.

3. For the sabayon, whisk the egg yolks and sugar together energetically in a metal bowl set over a pot of simmering water, double-boiler style (don’t let the bowl touch the hot water), until the mixture doubles in size and is billowy and pale; a probe thermometer should read 89°C. Cool this completely in the fridge too.

4. Whip the cream to soft peaks in a bowl by hand, with beaters, or in a stand mixer, then let it cool completely in the fridge. When all three pieces of the puzzle—caramel, sabayon, and whipped cream—are ready at the same fridge coldness, add the sabayon to the salted caramel and mix thoroughly, then gently fold in the whipped cream with a rubber spatula until well combined.

5. Transfer the mixture to a terrine mould lined with plastic wrap (lining the tin makes retrieval much easier) and freeze for at least 6 hours to set. Scoop or slice to serve as you see fit.

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This article is featured in the Autumn 2023 issue of National Seniors Australia’s quarterly member magazine, Our Generation

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