| Prosecco & Pomegranate Jelly 1 x 750ml bottle Prosecco or other white wine 250m1 water 300g caster sugar 8 leaves gelatine 1/2 teaspoon vanilla 3 teaspoons Cointreau, Grand Marnier or Triple sec, plus more to serve Seeds from 1 pomegranate, or 75g pomegranate seeds from a tub/packet Flavourless oil for greasing Double cream to serve (optional) Lightly grease a 1-litre jelly mould with flavourless oil and sit it on a small tray so it’s easy to convey it to the fridge later. Pour the Prosecco and water into a saucepan, add the sugar and stir to help it dissolve (hut do not stir once the pan is on the heat). At the same time, put the gelatine leaves into a dish and cover with cold water letting them soak for 5 minutes. ![]() Add the vanilla and keep the pan bubbling gently for another minute, before taking it off the heat. Carefully ladle about 250ml of the wine-sugar mixture into a measuring jug. When the gelatine leaves have had a good 5 minutes’ soaking, lift them out, squeezing and squelching them to remove excess water (this is curiously pleasurable) and whisk them into the jug of hot wine-sugar mixture to dissolve. Pour the jugful of liquid back into the pan (which must be still off the heat), whisk again, and tip it all back into the jug, before pouring it into the prepared jelly mould. (This may sound a kerfuffle, but it ensures the gelatine is thoroughly dispersed.) Put the filled-to-the-brim mould, still on its tray, into the fridge and leave to set overnight. It has a gentle set, which is what makes it so delectable. Just before you are ready to serve, fill a sink or plastic washing up bowl with warm water to come about halfway up the mould, and sit the as-yet-unturned mould in the warm water for half a minute. Take the mould out of the sink, wipe the water off the outside and place your serving plate on top. Then, with one hand on the plate and the other on the mould, tip them both over and lift off the mould to reveal the jelly. It will look smaller than it did in the mould; that’s expected. Dribble the Cointreau (or your choice of alcohol) over the jelly (putting the bottle on the table so people can anoint with more as they eat) and scatter with pomegranate seeds, a few on top, but most around the side. It spoils the jewel-like clarity of the jelly, but this is out of this world with a little double cream poured over each portion. Put a small jugful on the table as encouragement. Make the jelly up to 3 days ahead. From: Nigella Christmas. By Nigella Lawson. Published by Chatto & Windus (Random House). |
|