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Champagne Sorbet Recipe

Filed under Dessert, Holiday

Champagne Sorbet

I love cooking with friends, so when Garrett came over with a bottle of champagne in hand and a suggestion to make champagne sorbet for New Years, I was all over it. Unfortunately, our first two attempts were miserable failures (well, not completely, they made great punch). The problem with trying to freeze champagne, or sparkling wine, is that it is 13% alcohol, and alcohol doesn't freeze, at least not at 32°F. Also, if your sorbet mixture isn't chilled enough to begin with, it will warm up the freezer bowl of the ice cream maker and the bowl won't be cold enough to freeze the mixture sufficiently.

Three more attempts and several days later we now have a lovely champagne sorbet. The trick is to boil the champagne with the sugar when you dissolve the sugar, thus boiling away enough of the alcohol so that the sorbet freezes fine. The grapefruit and lemon juices naturally complement the citrus tones of the champagne.

Happy New Year!

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Champagne Sorbet Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups sparkling wine or champagne
  • 1 cup white granulated sugar
  • 1 Tbsp light corn syrup
  • 1 teaspoon of lemon and or grapefruit zest
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh grapefruit juice
  • 1/4 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice (Meyer if you have access to them)

Method

1 Put champagne, sugar, corn syrup, and zest into a saucepan. Bring to a vigorous boil so that the sugar completely dissolves, remove from heat.

2 Strain into a stainless steel bowl (will help cool down faster), add the grapefruit juice and lemon juice. Chill completely. To do this, either place bowl in a larger bowl half-filled with ice water, and stir until champagne solution is completely cold, refreshing the ice in the outer bowl if necessary. Or you can cover with plastic wrap and chill in your refrigerator over night. I put the bowl in the ice compartment of our freezer for a couple hours, because it fits, chills quickly, and is far enough away from the other food in the freezer.

3 Process the mixture in your ice cream maker (Amazon sells a good one) according to the ice cream maker directions. Transfer mixture to a storage container and freezer in your freezer until firm, at least 6 hours.

Makes about 1 quart.

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Posted by Elise on Dec 30, 2007 and indexed Champagne, Holiday, Ice Cream, Sorbet

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Comments

The grapefruit really does make this sorbet sing. It was worth all the trials to come up with this recipe. =)

Posted by: Garrett on December 30, 2007 5:11 PM

I am absolutely going to make this someday when I have an ice cream maker. Thank you! One of our favorite sorbets ever was strawberry champagne from Whole Foods. They stopped carrying it. I am sure this is even better.

Posted by: Jen Montgomery on December 31, 2007 6:18 PM

Thank you for doing all the trial and errors for us. I just made tangerine lemon sorbet and will make this one next.

Happy new year!

Posted by: Riana on January 1, 2008 6:54 AM

Have been following along on your site for a while - keep up the good work and thanks for all the great recipes so far!

Having become wildly suspicious of commercial foods with high-fructose corn syrup, I was wondering why this recipe uses both white sugar and corn syrup. Does the syrup serve another purpose beyond sweetening? Could one substitute "regular" sugar or something else for it?

HFC and regular corn syrup are two different things. HFC (High Fructose Corn Syrup) is only available to industrial food product makers, not to regular consumers. Regular corn syrup has been used in baking and cooking for generations. For example, pecan pie is made with corn syrup. It's used a lot in candy making because it helps keep the sugar from crystalizing.In this sorbet, it just helps keep the sorbet smooth, and prevents it from getting too icy. You can skip it if you want, but there is no need to skip it, especially if you have some on hand. ~Elise

Posted by: HornCologne on January 2, 2008 6:38 AM

I made your sorbet for New Year's Eve and it was just amazing! I did not use an ice cream machine but the manual method using a dish and a fork. This will become a yearly favorite.

Posted by: Jim Price on January 2, 2008 6:52 AM

Does this come out still fizzy? I once had champagne sorbet at a restaurant that still had a bit of fizz to it, and have been trying to recreate it ever since.

No, the fizziness has been cooked out of it. You might serve it with a teaspoon of champagne poured over it, which would probably add some sparkle to it. ~Elise

Posted by: Jen on January 15, 2008 11:33 AM

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