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Cranking Up Savory Sorbet

Tomato Sorbet
Enlarge Howard Yoon

There are endless options for savory sorbets: golden beet, green pea, red pepper. But the simplest and most satisfying to start with at home may be tomato sorbet. Scroll down for tomato, pea mint, and carrot ginger sorbet recipes.

Tomato Sorbet
Howard Yoon

There are endless options for savory sorbets: golden beet, green pea, red pepper. But the simplest and most satisfying to start with at home may be tomato sorbet. Scroll down for tomato, pea mint, and carrot ginger sorbet recipes.

About the Author

Howard Yoon is the editorial director of the Gail Ross Literary Agency in Washington, D.C. He has written and edited numerous nonfiction books.

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September 6, 2006

The ice cream machine sat unused in the cupboard, an artifact of our wedding a few years before. Like many engaged couples, my wife and I had been overzealous filling our gift registry at the kitchen store. We aimed our infrared gun at every cool gadget in sight. Pow! The ice cream machine was one of our first targets.

But once we had the machine, the prenuptial novelty of homemade ice cream quickly wore off. Why go through the hassle of making ice cream yourself when Ben & Jerry's and Haagen Dazs offer prepackaged pints of perfection?

Then I discovered sorbets — not just any sorbets, but savory sorbets made of vegetables and herbs — and things changed. The ice cream machine made its way to the front of the cupboard.

Savory sorbets have a refreshing, cool texture and a piquant zing that make your taste buds dance. They are a thinking person's dish, conjuring up old food memories such as tomatoes, lemon and basil, or red peppers, but delivering them in a surprising, new package.

The icy chill of sorbet wakes up your mouth. Your mind anticipates something sweet, but your tongue registers something unexpected, something savory. The effect is like seeing a favorite actor in a surprise movie cameo: first confusion, then surprise and finally enjoyment.

Savory sorbet works because of its consistency. It glides easily on the tongue and dissolves quickly on the mouth's roof, allowing the flavors to linger a while. This sorbet contains no cream, so it's not as decadent as ice cream. Nor is it as granulated or icy as granite, the Italian, semi-frozen flavored ice that can be made without an ice cream machine.

The key to savory sorbet is moderation — no more than a few bites served alone as a starter or added to an appetizer or main course. The effect should be fleeting, enough to warm up the brain's food neurons, kick-start the taste buds, and crank open the saliva glands.

Savory sorbets, unlike their sweet cousins, work better as a beginning to a meal or a complement to a dish than as a palate cleanser. Think of them, as Rick Tramonto of Tru Restaurant in Chicago refers to them in his cookbook Amuse-Bouche, as a "palate starter."

There are endless options for savory sorbets: golden beet, green pea, red pepper. But the simplest and most satisfying to start with at home may be tomato sorbet. And what better time of year to break out the ice cream machine than now, during peak tomato season?

In The French Laundry Cookbook, culinary lion Thomas Keller offers a tomato sorbet recipe served with a tomato tartare.

In typical Keller fashion, it's an involved procedure. He reduces peeled and seeded tomatoes, adds sauteed onions, then blends and strains the mixture. After adding the remaining ingredients, he strains again. All for one or two bites.

Chef Tetsuya Wakuda, who dazzles eaters Down Under with creative Asian dishes, has a surprisingly simple tomato sorbet that calls for throwing tomato — skins, seeds and all — into a blender with a few other ingredients. The recipe may be dumbed down for cookbook readers, yet it is served atop a complex dish of marinated giant scampi.

After fiddling with both recipes, I've come up with a compromise. Experiment with heirloom tomatoes — yellow, green or red — if you can find them. They pack a more intense tomato flavor than any of the pink waxy hybrids you find at the supermarket.

If you can't find heirlooms, buy vine-ripe tomatoes. A sorbet should convey the essence of an ingredient, so flavor matters.

Keller recommends serving sorbet the day it is made, when it tastes best. I've found sorbet can stay in the freezer a few days more than the maximum two Keller recommends.

But if you're like me, the sorbet probably won't last that long. Before you know it, you'll find yourself reaching back into the cupboard to pull out the ice cream machine for another batch.

Sorbet: Sorbet vs. Sherbert

Nifty essay on sherbet -- though why, when there's a perfectly serviceable English word that happens to be close to the root (the Persian sharbat), would anyone choose the snooty sorbet?

Writer's Note: Thanks for pointing that out. For some reason, the word "sherbert" evokes memories of me eating toxic orange ice cream out of a tub while watching new episodes of the Love Boat. It's a very '70s word and flavor in my memory rolodex.

Nowadays, a distinction actually has arisen between sherberts and sorbets. Sherberts generally have eggs or dairy, whereas sorbets do not.

Of course, perhaps it's also for the same reason chefs call green beans haricot verts: so they can charge an extra $5 a plate for the fancy name! -- Howard

Tomato Sorbet

Tomato Sorbet
Enlarge Howard Yoon

Tomato Sorbet
Howard Yoon

6 to 8 medium, very ripe tomatoes, peeled and seeded

6 ounces tomato juice

1 teaspoon sugar

1 tablespoon lemon juice

1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

Pinch of cayenne pepper

Kosher salt and fresh ground pepper to taste

Puree tomatoes in a blender or food processor.

Add tomato juice and rest of ingredients to the blender. Blend again until mixture is smooth. Strain mixture through a chinois or fine mesh sieve.

Put contents in ice cream machine and follow machine instructions.

Pea Mint Sorbet

Pea Mint Sorbet
Enlarge Howard Yoon

Pea Mint Sorbet
Howard Yoon

Adapted from Amuse-Bouche, by Rick Tramonto with Mary Goodbody (Random House 2002).

4 cups frozen peas

1/8 cup fresh mint leaves

1/2 cup water

3/4 cup simple syrup (add 1 cup of sugar into 1 cup of boiling water until sugar dissolves completely; cool to room temperature)

1 teaspoon salt

Boil peas in pot of water, 3 to 4 minutes. Drain and immediately submerge in ice water. Drain again.

Puree peas and mint in blender or food processor. Strain through a sieve. Thin the puree slightly with a few teaspoons of water (to the consistency of heavy cream).

Add simple syrup and salt.

Refrigerate mixture at least an hour until chilled. Prepare in an ice cream machine according to manufacturer's directions.

Ginger Carrot Sorbet

2 cups carrot juice, preferably freshly squeezed

1/2 cup orange juice

3/4 cup sugar

2 tablespoons lemon juice

2 tablespoons grated fresh ginger

Combine all ingredients in a medium pot. Bring to boil, and cook for 2 to 3 minutes until sugar is fully dissolved. Remove from heat.

Cool in refrigerator for at least an hour. Strain through a chinois or fine mesh sieve.

Prepare mixture in an ice cream machine according to manufacturer's directions.

Savory Sorbet: Before Its Time

Many, many years ago I worked in Vail, Colo., as a pastry chef. One summer, I made a "Tomato-Lime Sorbet." At the time, it did not sell, so I changed the name to "Summer Sorbet," and it sold! I still live in the area, though am no longer working in a kitchen. When I read today's piece about savory sorbets, I had to smile and reflect on an idea of mine that was obviously just a few years too early.

Author's Note: A good name can certainly make or break a dish. You probably know the story of the Patagonia toothfish being renamed by a clever fish distributor out in California. He couldn't sell any of this white flavorless fish ... until he renamed it Chilean sea bass. Now it's on the endangered list because it's so popular. -- Howard

 
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