National Espresso Day Dessert: Espresso Velvet Parfait

 
 
 
 
  • Posted by Chamie
  • Wed, 11/23/2011 - 10:57

espresso velvet gelain dessert

It's National Espresso Day -- how are you celebrating? I'm a big fan of espresso -- it's hard not to be when you grow up in an Italian family. Espresso was our traditional after dinner drink. There's no better way to extract the smooth, sweet, dark flavors of coffee. But as much as I love drinking espresso, I also love what the concentrated coffee beverage does when you combine it with other ingredients -- especially dessert. Who doesn't adore tiramisu, with its espresso-soaked ladyfingers and sweet, smooth cream? It's purely decadent -- and incredibly calorific. Since I constantly struggle with my weight -- and the weight usually wins -- tiramisu is not something I can enjoy often. If you're looking for a deliciously decadent espresso dessert that doesn't carry the calorie load of tiramisu -- though it's not low calorie by any means -- you might try this espresso velvet parfait recipe that I developed for a National Espresso Day celebration dinner a few years ago.

It combines squares of concentrated, melt-in-your-mouth espresso gelatin with airy poofs of whipped coffee that come as close as you can to the sensation of velvety crema without making an actual cup of espresso -- and it's cold! Top it with whipped cream for a cappucino-style parfait. I give instructions for making coffee with a colador because I really like the way the sweetness infuses the coffee when it's brewed together in the pan, but you can use coffee made any way that you want, and play with the amount of sugar to make it to your taste. Also, I made it in pans and cut it into squares, but you can make a pretty, showy parfait by layering the coffee gelatin and "crema" directly in parfait glasses and letting them jell that way. Either way, it's deliciously pretty and simply coffee-licious.

Espresso Velvet Parfait

Ingredients

1 cup coffee, cooled

1 cup coffee, hot

1 package unflavored gelatin

2 tablespoons sugar

1 pint whipping cream

Equipment

non-reactive saucepan

coffee colador (strainer)

bowl

blender

8x8 baking pan

whisk

I like to make my coffee for this with a colador -- a Puerto Rican coffee sock -- but you can use coffee made however you like it the best. To make it my way:

Bring 1 1/4 cups of spring water to just under a boil in a non-reactive saucepan. Add 1/4 cup finely ground coffee and stir continuously for about 3-5 minutes. Keep the water at a simmer -- if it starts to boil, remove it from the fire and continue stirring. Strain the coffee through a colador and set it aside to chill. 

Pour the cooled coffee into a bowl and sprinkle one package of unflavored gelatin over the top to soften. I use Knox gelatin, but there are others available in your supermarket aisle.

While it's softening, make another cup of coffee as above, stirring in 2 tablespoons of sugar while the coffee is brewing. Strain the mixture through a colador. and add the hot coffee to the cooled coffee and gelatin.

Stir until the gelatin is completely dissolved. Pour half of the coffee gelatin mixture into a flat pan (an 8x8 square baking pan works fine, but feel free to improvise) and put it into the fridge to set.

Pour the remaining coffee gelatin into the blender or a mixer bowl and whip until it's a light, frothy foam. Spoon the foam into a second pan, or carefully spoon it over the partially set gelatin in the first pan. Put it in the refrigerator, and allow it to chill for at least 4 hours.

To Serve

Just before serving, cut the gelatin into 1/2" squares with a warmed knife and pile the squares of espresso and "crema" in dessert glasses. Top with freshly whipped whipping cream, flavored with sugar and coffee to taste.

That's it. It sounds complicated, but it's really amazingly simple to make. It will take you all of 10-15 minutes to get the gelatin to the refrigerator, and another five to arrange prettily in glasses. And do use pretty, transparent glasses -- the shimmering blocks of coffee are as delicious to look at as they are to eat.

REVIEWS & COMMENTS

  • GREAT

    samuellaw178 | Thu, 11/24/2011 - 12:44

    What a great recipe!Thanks for sharing. I didn't even know there is a National Espresso Day.

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  • LOOKS GREAT

    Wakeknot | Thu, 11/24/2011 - 12:17

    and I can't believe that i did not know about national espresso day - that is my kind of day!

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  • DEFINITELY MORE RECIPES

    Chamie | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 22:45

    Absolutely, yeahyeah -- I love cooking with coffee as well as cooking things to go with coffee so I have lots of recipes that I plan to share. In fact, I may be caffeinating the turkey tomorrow -- I don't have a working oven large enough to roast a turkey, so I steam the bird in a big lobster pot on top of the stove. I'm thinking of adding coffee to the steaming water to see how it turns out.

  • NICE

    yeahyeah | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 21:08

    That is a good looking recipe, can we expect more in the future? It sounds delicious.

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  • DECADENT

    EricBNC | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 20:02


    I knew there was something I liked about you Chamie - you have culinary talent to go with your writing style!

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  • @JBVIAU

    Chamie | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 17:27

    Oh, the texture is -- well, there really isn't a texture. It's really not like commercial Jell-O -- this literally melts on your tongue. And if you top it with real whipped cream, it dribbles down between the cubes as it melts and picks up the coffee flavor wonderfully. Kids like it, but it's a really sophisticated adult dessert, too. Deliciously simple and very pretty on the table.

  • COFFEE JELLO

    jbviau | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 17:03

    I'm a little worried about the texture with this, but I'll keep an open mind. ;)

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  • THANKS FOR THE RECIPE I'VE

    intrepid510 | Wed, 11/23/2011 - 13:55

    Thanks for the recipe I've been meaning to try some coffee gelitan for a while now, this could be the nudge I finally need. However, I do have a lot of cooking to do tonight because of tomorrow!

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