What a versatile marvel pumpkin is. I recently devoured an entire pint of pumpkin ice cream and, let me tell you, it is delightful. This pumpkin rum sorbet is just as silky as its dairy relative; however, it tastes more like pumpkin pie chased with a dark n’ stormy.
I am not going to sit here and wax poetic about how much I worship pumpkin. I’m not going to tell you how excellent this sorbet is, and that you WILL scoop another serving while your mouth is still full with the first. Nor will I tell you about the wonderfully crunchy, sweet brittle that pairs perfectly with the creamy cold sorbet. I simply do not think you need to hear this from me.
Because pictures speak a thousand words…
Pumpkin rum sorbet and cinnamon walnut brittle is a sugary delight you will not want to pass up this holiday season.
Ingredients:
1 ¼ cup water
1 cup white sugar
1 tbsp. dark molasses
¼ cup maple syrup
2 tbsp. Goslings black seal rum
1 15oz can of pumpkin puree
1 tbsp. pumpkin pie spice
A pinch of salt
1 tsp vanilla paste
2 tsp. lemon juice
Directions:
In a sauce pan on medium heat combine water, sugar, and molasses until the sugar is dissolved. Turn off the heat and set aside. In a large mixing bowl with a spout combine pumpkin puree with spices, vanilla, rum, maple syrup, salt and lemon juice. Stir in the simple syrup, cover and chill.
Add the mixture to your ice cream machine per manufacturer’s directions. Pack into a plastic container and freeze, preferably overnight. Allow it to sit in room temperature for at least 20 minutes before scooping (or microwave for 20 seconds to soften).
Cinnamon Walnut Brittle
Ingredients:
2 cups sugar
½ cup water
1 cup chopped walnuts, toasted
2 tbsp. butter
½ tsp. ground cinnamon
Pinch of sea salt
Directions (Thank you Alton Brown)
Foil and butter a baking sheet; set aside.
In a small bowl combine walnuts and cinnamon; set aside.
Brush the inside of a medium sized heavy saucepan with vegetable oil. Add the sugar and water to the saucepan, cook over high heat, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, until it comes to a boil. Stop stirring, cover and cook for 3 minutes. Uncover, reduce heat to medium, and cook until the sugar is a dark amber color. Take off the heat and stir in butter, walnuts and cinnamon. *This will cause it to bubble then greatly reduce the temperature of the sugar so work quickly.* Once the bubbles calm and it is evenly mixed, pour mixture onto the pre-foiled/buttered baking sheet. Using a buttered spatula, spread thin. You will have to work quickly when pouring out and spreading the mixture in the pan. (note: Gently heating the baking dish in a 200 degree oven will help the mixture from cooling too quickly) Cool completely and then break into pieces.
The brittle can be crushed on top of the sorbet, mixed in to the batter before you freeze or nibbled on the side. Or all of the above. No judging here.
Hello, classically trained eater! I love it! great blog and this recipe looks beyond delicious. I adore pumpkin too and I cook with it all year round not just at Thanksgiving. thank you for sharing such an amazing recipe!
ReplyDeletehttp://foodfashionandflow.blogspot.com/
Wow, way to blow my mind. Looks fantastic!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds incredible! I love the seasonal flavors and the addition of rum in the sorbet. An exceptional dessert!
ReplyDeleteWow - pumpkin SORBET?! Such an amazing and creative dish! I love the flavor and texture contrasts...and the pictures are amazing!
ReplyDeleteWow! This sounds wonderful.
ReplyDeleteHow luscious that scoop looks! As if that was not enough, you have added some very tasty brittle. You have really pulled together something special. Delicious creation. Have a great day!
ReplyDeleteLooks just brilliant, I'm going to be brave and give it a go!
ReplyDeleteYou had me at "rum." Also - dark n' stormy. Great flavors here!
ReplyDeleteOh my. This looks DIVINE.
ReplyDeleteWow this looks fantastic! That cinnamon walnut brittle sounds amazing too. Nice job!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds awesome--what a vivid set of flavors! Sending some buzz.
ReplyDeleteWow, I've never seen a pumpkin sorbet...but it looks fabulous!!
ReplyDeleteDivine! The crunchy brittle must be a perfect compliment to the sorbet!
ReplyDeleteI want this. Now. Please!?
ReplyDeleteThank you ;)
I've never had pumpkin sorbet... but it sounds amazing! ... especially with that walnut brittle!
ReplyDeleteNice pumpkin recipe
ReplyDelete