Guys!

I don’t want to curse myself, but I thinkkkk I’m in the homestretch of the kitchen remodel? The kitchen now has working electricity (complete with countertop lighting and this beautiful fixture from Schoolhouse Electric), as well as running water, a working dishwasher and a disposal. Honestly, I thought I would be most excited by the dishwasher, but the disposal seems to be taking the cake — it’s been years since I’ve had a disposal, and I’ve been washing dishes by hand simply out of the sheer novelty of being to rinse eggshells, crumbs and rice leftovers off my plate and down the sink without having to fish out a gross drain filter afterwards.

Me. Washing dishes. For fun. This is surely just the start of something great, right?

To celebrate the fact that Erlend and I had a functioning kitchen this weekend, we excused ourselves early from a Saturday night party in order to return home to the gleaming kitchen. I prepared us a makeshift charcuterie plate on the kitchen’s shiny new gray countertops (yep, the countertops that the granita is sitting on in the pictures) complete with soft brie and Olympic Provisions chorizo salami. Erlend cracked open a bottle of rosé, and we then proceeded to watch Freaks and Geeks in the kitchen’s new breakfast nook.

Ahh, the good life.

And because I’m a lamepants/lightweight who gets buzzed after she has too much Earl Grey tea (you can ask my friend Carroll about this — she’ll verify that this is a fact), we ended up with about a cup’s worth of wine leftover, enough to make this recipe for boozy granita that I’d spotted earlier this week on Food52 and been dreaming about since.

When I posted a picture of the granita on Instagram, however, a few people sent me a message. That looks good, most of them commented. But what’s a granita? I wasn’t quite sure how to describe it myself, so I turned to Wikipedia (my source for almost everything these days, as sad as that sounds), which described it as “an Italian semi-frozen dessert made from sugar, water, and various flavorings”. Indeed, I like to think of granita as a half-frozen sorbet with the texture of a snow cone:

More interesting to me, however, was the fact that the Wikipedia article describes the granita’s texture varying between different regions. That is, in parts of Italy, some granitas are as smooth as sorbet, while in others they are coarse and chunky with ice crystals.

This particular recipe, made with crushed fresh blackberries and rosé wine, falls somewhere in between the two. The alcohol in the rosé wine prevents the granita from freezing into hard, sharp ice, and instead naturally creates a desirably smooth and slushy dessert. The original Food52 recipe recommends serving the granita with a scoop of silky whipped cream to create contrasting textures with each mouthful, so I paired my granita with basil-infused whipped cream to great effect:

Some baker’s notes:

    • This is quite the boozy dessert (you can definitely taste the alcohol, even despite being watered down with additional water and blackberry juice), so I would be wary of serving this to children. Another thing to note is that the granita melts really, really quickly, so only remove it from the freezer once you’ve made the whipped cream and you’re ready to eat and serve it immediately.
    • For this particular recipe, you’ll want a dry rosé wine that’s fresh and acidic, without extra sugar to bury its mineral/fruity/whatever flavors and aromas. You’re going to be adding in water and sugar for the granita, so you don’t want anything that’s already too sweet to begin with.
  • To infuse whipped cream with basil, you’re going to need to do some advanced planning. It’s best to leave the basil in the cream for at least 3 hours, but preferably overnight.

 
 

Get the Recipe: Blackberry Rosé Granita with Basil Whipped Cream

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Ingredients

For the Blackberry Rosé Granita

    (makes around 2 cups)

    • 1/4 cup fresh blackberries
    • 1 cup rosé wine (see baker's notes)
    • 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons water
    • 3 tablespoons granulated sugar

    For the Basil Whipped Cream

      (makes around 1 cup)

      • 1/2 cup heavy cream, cold
      • 3 to 5 fresh basil leaves
      • 1 teaspoon granulated sugar

      Instructions
       

      For the Blackberry Rosé Granita

      • In a medium bowl, use a fork to crush 1/4 cup fresh blackberries until juicy and the fruit has broken up to the consistency of jam. Add 1 cup rosé wine, 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons water, and 3 tablespoons granulated sugar to the fruit mixture. Stir together until the granulated sugar has dissolved completely.
      • Pour the mixture into a shallow baking dish and place in the freezer until partially frozen. Use a fork to scrape and break the mixture into shards and crystals. Return the pan to the freezer to freeze completely. Scrape and toss the granita one more time. Keep frozen until serving (see baker’s notes).

      For the Basil Whipped Cream

      • In a liquid measuring bowl, combine 1/2 cup heavy cream and 3 to 5 fresh basil leaves (use more for a stronger flavor).  Stir gently, gently crushing the leaves into the cream, before covering with plastic wrap. Refrigerate to let the basil infuse the cream for at least 3 hours, preferably overnight.
      • Once the cream has been infused with basil, strain out the basil leaves. Combine the cream and 1 teaspoon granulated sugar and use a freestanding electric mixer with a whisk attachment or a handheld electric whisk to whip on medium-high speed until soft peaks form. Spoon over the granita and serve immediately.

      Notes

      Adapted from Food52
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