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Mango Sorbet

Servings

4

Serving size

1/2 cup
COOKING TIME
60 Minutes
CHILLING TIME
2 hours

This recipe can easily be multiplied and makes good leftovers.

Mango Sorbet

Ingredients

1/2 cup Water
1/3 cup Sugar
2 fruit without refuse Mangos, raw (about 12 ounces each)

Instructions

Place the water and sugar in a small sauce pan over medium high heat.

Whisk as the water heats, and when it begins to boil and the sugar dissolves, cook for one more minute while whisking and remove from the heat.

Let the sugar solution cool for about 5 minutes.

Peel the mangoes and slice the flesh away from the pit.

Place the sugar solution in a blender with the mangoes and blend until smooth.

Pulse the blender in 10 second bursts for 1 minute.

Place the mango mixture in a plastic storage container.

Place the container in the freezer. Every 7 to 10 minutes whisk the mixture vigorously.

As the mixture thickens, switch to a rubber spatula until the sorbet is well frozen.

Serve.

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Special Diet Information

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GERD / Acid Reflux

No specific GERD triggers.

Lactose

This recipe is safe for those who are lactose intolerant.

Coumadin® (Warfarin)

This recipe is safe for Coumadin (warfarin) users.

Gluten Sensitivity

This recipe is safe for those who are sensitive to gluten.

Sodium

This is a low sodium recipe.

Recipe Notes

This quote is from The Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations: The Complete Opinionated Guide by Charles Harrington Eisler.

It is a great history of how and why we pronounce this sor-BAY and not SOR-bit.

You can make this with almost any fruit and it is best to have the fruit almost, but not quite, overripe. One pound of strawberries is about 3 1/2 to 4 cups and if you use an equivalent amount of fruit, you should come out with a good sorbet.

The key is the amount of water in the fruit. Grapes, for example, are a bit higher in water content and will freeze more solid as a result. Melons or stone fruit will be a bit firmer.

The technique described here is good but a bit labor intensive. The idea is to whip some air into the sorbet as it freezes to make it a bit fluffier and lighter. These days you can purchase a small ice cream churn that will take all of the work out of this for you.

"With lemming-like zeal, Nearly all Americans have adopted the French-fried sor-BAY."

Charles Harrington Eisler