Wednesday, April 24, 2024
ADVT 
Food

Mango, Pomegranate, Berry and Coconut Trifle

By Chef Anjum Anand, 02 Nov, 2016

    This trifle is really lovely and luscious, billowy yet textured. These fruits go really well together adding different tastes and textures and yet being harmonious together and with the coconut. 

     

    Ingredients

    250 g shop-bought Madeira cake

    2 large ripe mangoes or 3 medium ones

    2 pomegranates, kernels removed

    75 ml pomegranate juice (optional

    Lemon juice to taste

    175 g strawberries, washed, hulled and diced into 1-1 ½ pieces

    300 ml double cream

     

    For the coconut custard:

    65 g grated fresh coconut

    200 ml each whole milk and double cream

    2 tbsp plus 2 tsp sugar plus 1 rounded tbsp extra for strawberries

    1 1/3 level tsp cornflour

    4 egg yolks

     

    Preparation

    Start with the custard. Place the milk and cream in a large saucepan and bring to a boil. Meanwhile, whisk the yolks, sugar and cornflour together until smooth. Slowly pour in the hot cream mixture, whisking all the while so that the eggs do not scramble.

    Pour the whole thing back into the saucepan and place over a gentle heat. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly, this takes me about 10-12 minutes. Cook for another 30-40 seconds and take off the heat. Stir in the coconut and leave to cool.

    Place the strawberries and ¾ of the pomegranates in a bowl, add the pomegranate juice if using. Add the extra sugar and a squeeze of lemon juice. Mash some of the strawberries into the sauce and leave to macerate.

    Meanwhile prepare the mangoes. Cut the cheeks off the mango and cut the flesh from the skin, cut into 1½-2 cm dice. Cut the sides off the stone and see if you can get any flesh off these.

    Whip the cream until it is at soft peaks stage.

    Cut the cake into 1 cm pieces and line the base of a medium glass sized bowl.  Pour over the strawberries and pomegranate with their juices. Spoon the mango evenly over the top. Pour over the custard. Spoon the cream on top, cover with cling film and chill in the fridge until ready to serve.

    Decorate with the extra pomegranates seeds and serve. You can also use small glasses to make these up in small, individual sized portions which also look lovely.

    MORE Food ARTICLES

    Paneer Kofta and Shiitake Mushroom Curry

    Chef Anand was one of the first writers to create and write Indian recipes catering for the health-conscious 

    Chef Anjum Anand

    Chef Anand was one of the first writers to create and write Indian recipes catering for the health-conscious 

    Rhubarb and Pomegranate Bhapa Doi with Pistachio Burfi

    Chef Patron of the highly acclaimed Benares restaurant in London, Atul Kochhar rose to fame as one the first Indian chefs to win a coveted Michelin star.Chef Kochhar, aBritish based chef, restaurateur and television personality, is one of the most critically acclaimed chefs in Britain for his take on modern Indian cuisine.

    Aloo Tikki

    With a focus on combining his heritage and love of British ingredients, Chef Kochhar’s inno...

    Tasty recipes by Chef Atul Kochhar

    Chef Kochhar, a British based chef, restaurateur and television personality, is one of the most critically acclaimed chefs in Britain for his take on modern Indian cuisine.

    Shaam Savera

    Spinach koftas are filled with paneer and served floating on a saffron coloured, velvety gravy. It also stands for shaam, or dusk, as represented by the darker shades of the spinach, while the paleness of the paneer symbolizes savera or dawn. 

    PrevNext