The Denver Post

Turn your frozen fruit into the simplest soft serve

Strawberry and Sesame Swirl Soft Serve

- By Clare De Boer

When a balmy evening inspires an ice cream craving, it’s time for a 60-second soft serve.

Unlike regular ice cream, which requires some combinatio­n of muscle, machinery and time, this soft serve whips frozen fruit and a little dairy into a dessert that can — and must — be eaten instantly. It’s light and lux with fruit as the star.

It starts with the kind of fruit that’s fragrant enough to withstand freezing. Peaches, figs, mangoes and bananas should be ripened to the extreme, cut into blitzable chunks and frozen at home. Strawberri­es, cherries and blueberrie­s, particular­ly the tiny ones from Maine, are great purchased frozen and guarantee you’re always ready, just in case.

Creamy things, like Greek yogurt, crème fraîche and heavy cream, give the dessert its mouthfeel. Use no more than one part to every three parts fruit. Heavy cream helps weak blenders whip rock-solid fruit, though too much turns the soft serve sloppy. As cravings are by their very nature unplanned, use whatever you have — even if it means ricotta or refrozen icy ice cream.

Adding sugar is contentiou­s. But even the sweetest peach needs a little bit to become soft serve. Start with a teaspoon of powdered sugar for every cup of fruit, and add more to taste. Bananas don’t need much more than this, while berries and cherries routinely take at least 2 teaspoons per cup. If you’ve incorporat­ed sour cream or crème fraîche, add more. If you’re planning to mix in other sweet things, hold back. Slight tartness distinguis­hes these from store-bought pints.

Dark chocolate chunks, halvah, candied ginger, nuts and cookies can be added to the almost-finished ice cream, and a few pulses of the blender will crush and mix them in. Jams, citrus curds and nut butters ripple through with just one pulse.

Pile it high in chilled glasses, which you can hold in the freezer while you whip cream to go on top. It can stay there for up to 30 minutes before losing its freshly churned allure. But do rush: At room temperatur­e, it’ll go from soft to soupy in 10 minutes. Like all of summer’s ephemera, it should be inhaled while it lasts.

Yield: 2 servings (about 2 cups) Total time: 1 minute

Ingredient­s

2 cups frozen strawberri­es (about 10

ounces)

½ cup full-fat Greek yogurt or

labneh

2 tablespoon­s heavy cream 2 tablespoon­s tahini

4 teaspoons powdered sugar

¼ cup sesame halvah (about 2

ounces), plus more for garnish

Directions

Place the strawberri­es, yogurt, cream, tahini and sugar in a blender or food processor, and blitz, scraping down the sides as needed, until smooth.

Crumble the halvah on top and stir through to distribute. Serve in chilled glasses with more halvah crumbled on top. Eat quickly.

 ?? David Malosh, © The New York Times Co. ?? Strawberry and sesame swirl soft serve.
David Malosh, © The New York Times Co. Strawberry and sesame swirl soft serve.

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