Whipt syllabub has been a popular dessert dish since the 1500s. It's referenced in one of Jane Austen's letter from 1792, and her sister-in-law and friend, Martha Lloyd, documented a recipe for it in her Household Book. It's a super easy dish to make, with a silken mousse-like texture and plenty of bright sweetness.
The historic version of the recipe found in almost every Georgian cookbook is essentially the same (some with egg whites, some without), but modern appliances mean you can whip this up in far less time, and chill it to the perfect consistency.
For a non-alcoholic version, substitute sweet grape juice for the cream sherry and apple cider for the white wine.
The original recipe, from Hannah Glasse's The Art of Cookery:
Ingredients:
- 2 cups heavy whipping cream
- 3/4 cup sugar
- The juice and zest of one large lemon*
- 1 cup sweet white wine
- 1/2 cup cream sherry
*My lemon turned out to be a lemon, so I swapped for 3 Tblsp lemon juice and no zest. It turned out just fine, but if you have the option to use zest, it really adds to the recipe!
1. In a mixing bowl, combine the whipping cream, sugar, and lemon zest.
2. In a separate bowl, mix together the lemon juice, white wine, and cream sherry.
3. Whip the cream mixture for about a minute. While it continues to whip, slowly pour in the wine mixture. If you pour too fast, it'll split.
4. Continue whipping for about 6-8 minutes total, until it looks more or less like whipped cream. The alcohol will keep it from reaching full whipped cream texture, but overwhipping will turn it to butter.
5. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least 8 hours, preferably overnight. Stir it a few times while it's chilling.
6. Serve in individual wine glasses, with a spoon. If you want to get fancy, garnish with a curl of lemon zest or a fresh raspberry.
This makes enough for about 6 servings.
It can sit in the fridge for several days, but it will separate (whipped cream on top, wine below), so gently fold it back together before serving. The more times you do this, of course, the less whipped and more cream the texture will become.
About the author of this post: I'm Beth: a bookwyrm, history geek, hobby baker, Austen fan, and collector of pastimes. Henry Tilney and Elizabeth Bennet are my Austen fictional crushes, which pretty much tells you everything you need to know about me. I can be found blogging at https://bethwyrm.blogspot.com/ and creating general nonsense at: https://www.instagram.com/goddessbeth/, https://www.tiktok.com/@artemishi, and https://twitter.com/ArtemisHi.
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I always wondered what was in syllabub. This sounds cool and delicious, Beth. Thanks for bringing it into modern times for us.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure! I hope you get to try it someday.
DeleteWhat did you think of the recipe? Was it tasty?
ReplyDeleteI loved it. I'm not supposed to have dairy, and I live alone- so I ate the whole 6 servings myself, over the course of 5 days. :D But it's a fun mousse-like texture, and it's sweet but not overly sugary, and one serving wasn't heavy (considering I was eating it in the summer).
DeleteI'm definitely going to try it
ReplyDeleteI hope you like it!
DeleteWow, this looks good (love creamy stuff)
ReplyDeleteIf you like whipped cream and mousse, you'll definitely enjoy it!
DeleteLooks delish.
ReplyDelete