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Tuesday
Jun152010

Mixed Berry Frozen Yogurt Sherbet

Years ago we had a huge blackberry thicket on our family farm. (Not really a “farm” farm—it was more of a hodge podge of large and small pets and a huge vegetable garden surrounded by fields and mountains.)

Blackberries become fully ripe during the dog days of summer—about the worst time to get dressed in jeans, a long shirt, and your old ankle high work boots. The worst time to wade through dense bramble while bees and bugs buzz you. The worst time to bake in the sun for a few hours while scratching your hands as they reach down into prickly bushes that are home to all manner of creepy crawlies.

And the best time for a sweet reward. The blackberries were half the size of your thumb, plump, dark purplish black—the most beautiful dark eggplant color—and fabulously juicy. We ate far more than we ever brought back up to the kitchen. There may have been enough to make blackberry preserves but mostly we just ate them the way they were—warm and sweet from the sun.

We enjoyed the blackberries from that thicket for many years.

I pucker now when eating commercially grown blackberries—they’re so tart. I was lucky recently and found some that were wonderful and sweet. We ate quite a few au naturel but decided to make a blackberry “something” with the rest. You know—a buckle or slump or crumble. Somehow I settled on a cross between a frozen yogurt and sherbet—a yobet (certainly not a shergurt!).

The inclusion of yogurt provides an interesting result adding a bit of a zing and creaminess to this sweet frozen confection. And, just look at that color!

This yobet thing definitely has promise.

 

Mixed Berry Frozen Yogurt Sherbet

This mixed berry frozen confection works well with any combination of blackberries, strawberries and raspberries. I used 4 cups of ripe, sweet blackberries and 1 cup of strawberries. Rinse the berries just before starting. Clean and cut the strawberries, if using them.

Ripe, sweet berries work the best. Adjust the sugar to your liking if your berries aren’t sweet enough or you prefer a sweeter end result. Add additional sugar a tablespoon at a time, carefully tasting (it may be hot!) until the sweetness is to your liking.

Add into a medium saucepan:

4-5 cups mixed berries, cleaned

¼ cup sugar (or more)

¼ cup water

1 ½ teaspoons lemon juice

½ teaspoon cinnamon

 

Stir the mixture well. Bring it to a boil and then reduce the heat. Simmer uncovered for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. The juices of the berries will emerge and the mixture will get thick.

Remove the berry mixture from the heat. After it cools, about 15 minutes or so, run it through a food mill to extract the juices. (If you don’t have a food mill push the mash through a sieve using a large wooden spoon.) Discard the seeds.

Stir in:

6 oz container So Delicious Plain or Vanilla Coconut Yogurt (alternatively, use soy or dairy yogurt)

Pour the mixture into a ceramic or glass bowl and refrigerate until cold—overnight is best but if you can’t wait that long a few hours will do.

Freeze according to your ice cream maker instructions.

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  • Response
    I hope everyone is gearing up for a lovely Weekend!  Here in Atlanta it’s going to be beautiful, but HOT… So, here are some ideas for cooling off! Thirsty?  Make a Cucumber Gimlet at Crumpets and Cakes! Or maybe some Homemade Herbal Lemonad...

Reader Comments (11)

I need an ice cream maker, stat! This looks delicious! The color is so vivid and beautiful. I bet it was amazing. Blackberries have always been a favorite of mine. My grandmother's blackberry pie is my favorite.

Jun 15, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAmber

This looks heavenly! And, what a perfectly delicious way to use the abundance of fruit right now. My Littles will love this. Thank you!

Jun 15, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterKristin

Amber - Thanks sweetie! I have an ancient (one of the first) small ice cream maker where the "bowl" lives in the freezer until it's time for action! They're so easy to use. Go get one for your new kitchen! (If you have a Kitchen Aid mixer there's an ice cream attachment that's very cool.)

Kristin - I think this recipe could be adjusted for all sorts of fruit. The wheels are turning! I'm thinking peach and mango--yum!

Jun 15, 2010 | Registered CommenterNancy Kohler

I would love this right now!! It looks fantastic.

Jun 16, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterMemoria

Memoria - Grazie signora bella. Ha visitato il vostro blog -- bello! (Wish I was fluent in Italian!)

Jun 16, 2010 | Registered CommenterNancy Kohler

How about going with the European version Yougurt and calling it You-bet!

Nicole - That's perfect. Absolutely perfect. Love it.

Jun 16, 2010 | Registered CommenterNancy Kohler

I love the simplicity of this! Now if only I could get my five year old to eat berries, sigh... I guess I'll have to eat it all myself!
Nice to have found your blog!
dot

Jun 18, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterDot

This is absolutely gorgeous! I definitely want some :).

Jun 18, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterLauren

You got me again, with a beautiful, mouth-watering treat! I've got the ice cream maker, but I think I need a food mill. I usually take hours and get a sore arm from using a sieve. LOL.

Dot - I think this would work with almost any fruit. I'm thinking mango next. Thanks for visiting!

Lauren - Come on over...there's still some in the freezer!

Heather - I have an inexpensive plastic foodmill that I use maybe once a year. But, yes, it's sooo much better than using a sieve!

Jun 20, 2010 | Registered CommenterNancy Kohler
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