Chilled Lemon Souffle for Two
By America's Test KitchenPublished on August 22, 2007
Yield
Serves 2 to 3
Ingredients
Before You Begin
To make this lemon soufflé 'soufflé' over the rim of the dish, use a 2 cup soufflé dish and make a foil collar for it before beginning the recipe. For those less concerned about appearance, this dessert can be served from any 1 quart or 3 cup serving bowl. For best texture, serve the soufflé after 1 1/2 hours of chilling. It may be chilled up to 6 hours; though the texture will stiffen slightly because of the gelatin, it will taste just as good.
Instructions
- Place lemon juice in small nonreactive bowl; sprinkle gelatin over. Set aside.
- Heat milk and two tablespoons sugar in small saucepan over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until steaming and sugar is dissolved, about 3-4 minutes. Meanwhile, whisk together yolks, 1 tablespoon sugar, and cornstarch in medium bowl until pale yellow and thickened, 3 to 5 minutes. Whisking constantly, gradually add hot milk to yolks. Return milk and egg mixture to saucepan and cook, stirring constantly, over medium-low heat until foam has dissipated to a thin layer and mixture thickens to consistency of heavy cream and registers 185 degrees on instant-read thermometer, about 2-3 minutes. Strain into medium bowl; stir in lemon juice mixture and zest. Set bowl of custard in large bowl of ice water; stir occasionally to cool.
- While custard mixture is chilling, with hand mixer beat egg whites and cream of tartar in medium mixing bowl on medium-high speed until foamy, about 1 minute. Increase speed to high; gradually add remaining sugar and continue to beat until glossy and whites hold soft peaks when beaters are lifted, about 2 minutes longer. Do not overbeat. Remove bowl containing custard mixture from ice water bath; gently whisk in about 1/3 of egg whites, then fold in remaining whites with large rubber spatula until almost no white streaks remain.
- In same mixer bowl (washing not necessary), beat cream on high speed until soft peaks form when beaters are lifted, 2 to 3 minutes. Fold cream into custard and egg-white mixture until no white streaks remain. Pour into prepared soufflé dish or bowl. Chill until set but not stiff, about 1 1/2 hours (can be refrigerated up to 6 hours, see note); remove foil collar, if using, and serve, garnishing if desired.
Yield
Serves 2 to 3Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Why This Recipe Works
For a chilled lemon soufflé recipe that would perfect the unusual marriage of cream and foam, sweet and sour, and high lemony notes and rich custard, we lightened a silky custard base with beaten egg whites and whipped cream, then added both lemon juice and zest to give the soufflé an extra citrus punch. Following the last step in our lemon soufflé recipe, we fashioned a homemade foil collar for our soufflé dish before pouring the mixture in to give it more room to rise.
Before You Begin
To make this lemon soufflé 'soufflé' over the rim of the dish, use a 2 cup soufflé dish and make a foil collar for it before beginning the recipe. For those less concerned about appearance, this dessert can be served from any 1 quart or 3 cup serving bowl. For best texture, serve the soufflé after 1 1/2 hours of chilling. It may be chilled up to 6 hours; though the texture will stiffen slightly because of the gelatin, it will taste just as good.
Instructions
- Place lemon juice in small nonreactive bowl; sprinkle gelatin over. Set aside.
- Heat milk and two tablespoons sugar in small saucepan over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until steaming and sugar is dissolved, about 3-4 minutes. Meanwhile, whisk together yolks, 1 tablespoon sugar, and cornstarch in medium bowl until pale yellow and thickened, 3 to 5 minutes. Whisking constantly, gradually add hot milk to yolks. Return milk and egg mixture to saucepan and cook, stirring constantly, over medium-low heat until foam has dissipated to a thin layer and mixture thickens to consistency of heavy cream and registers 185 degrees on instant-read thermometer, about 2-3 minutes. Strain into medium bowl; stir in lemon juice mixture and zest. Set bowl of custard in large bowl of ice water; stir occasionally to cool.
- While custard mixture is chilling, with hand mixer beat egg whites and cream of tartar in medium mixing bowl on medium-high speed until foamy, about 1 minute. Increase speed to high; gradually add remaining sugar and continue to beat until glossy and whites hold soft peaks when beaters are lifted, about 2 minutes longer. Do not overbeat. Remove bowl containing custard mixture from ice water bath; gently whisk in about 1/3 of egg whites, then fold in remaining whites with large rubber spatula until almost no white streaks remain.
- In same mixer bowl (washing not necessary), beat cream on high speed until soft peaks form when beaters are lifted, 2 to 3 minutes. Fold cream into custard and egg-white mixture until no white streaks remain. Pour into prepared soufflé dish or bowl. Chill until set but not stiff, about 1 1/2 hours (can be refrigerated up to 6 hours, see note); remove foil collar, if using, and serve, garnishing if desired.
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