Health & Fitness
Keep cool with icy granita
Granita is simply combining water, sugar, and fruit flavorings and then freezing it. It's like a fancy slushy for grownups.
Heat wave. There are a couple of things you can do to cool off: Swim outside as much as possible and eat ice. Lots and lots of ice.
Not ice cubes, but delicious and refreshing granita – Italian ice that you can make so easily in your own freezer. Granita is simply combining water, sugar, and fruit flavorings and then freezing it. It’s like a fancy slushy for grownups.
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I learned a couple of things in this process that might make this even easier for you.
1. You really do need to use a glass dish because you have to use a fork with some force to get the ice out of the pan and you don’t want to scoop up metal into your granita. I did this.
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2. Tastes vary wildly on what makes a good granita. I admit I sometimes have a hard time telling the difference between too sweet and too tart. I would never make it as a lemonade tester. None of the recipes I looked at were remotely similar. In fact, no two descriptions of granita were alike either. So to taste really counts here.
Since I still had some fresh currants left over from making currant pie, my first batch was a raspberry-currant granita that came out looking more like a sorbet. I think this had something to do with the fact that granita recipes call for stirring every hour or so, and who has time for that, really? This is when I used (and nearly ruined) a metal pan. Fail.
It was still delicious, though, tangy and tart and refreshing. I sat on my deck and watched the sun go down feeling very … cool as I ate my cool granita/sorbet. But I was determined to make a granita that had ice that sparkled like shards of glass.
This time I wanted to make a lemony, minty granita. This is a great idea for you if mint is now marching through your garden. Every year I am left with more mint than I know what to do with. The recipe below should help, because you need 2 cups of fresh leaves for each batch.
Making granita will give you the perfect excuse to stay indoors and blast the air conditioner without feeling guilty about missing out on a day of summer.
Currant and Raspberry Granita
Serves 4
1 cup currants
2 cups (1 pint) fresh raspberries
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
Purée the currants and raspberries in a blender. Press the liquid through a fine mesh strainer into a bowl. Add lemon juice.
In a medium saucepan, bring the water and sugar to a boil. Boil until the mixture has the consistency of a light syrup, about 4 minutes. Allow to cool.
Stir in the fruit purée and add to an 8″x8″ glass baking dish. Cover with foil and allow to freeze, about 3 hours.
Scoop into glass dishes and serve.
Lemon Mint Granita
Serves 4
1 cup water
3/4 to 1 cup sugar, to taste
2 cups fresh mint leaves
1/2 to 3/4 cup of fresh lemon juice, about 5 lemons
Zest of one lemon
In a medium saucepan, add water, sugar, and mint leaves. Heat on medium heat and stir until sugar dissolves. Heat for 4 minutes on low heat (you do not need to boil). Remove from heat and allow to cool.
Remove and discard mint leaves.
Add lemon juice and zest to sugar syrup and stir. Pour into an 8″x8″ glass dish and cover with foil. Place in freezer. Stir the granita every hour or so for up to 6 six hours until frozen.
Scoop out of dish with a fork by raking the ice into shards. Serve in glass dish and garnish with a mint leaf or two.
Related posts: Sparkling watermelon lemonade, Rhubarb spritzer
