FEATHER-LIGHT CHOCOLATE WHIP WITH AQUAFABA
There wouldn’t be anything special in this dessert if it wasn’t for its main ingredient. It was aquafaba – i.e. the liquid which is left after straining chickpeas from a tin. Up to now I have poured it away. From today I will never make this mistake. Joël Roessel, a French chef, was the discoverer of aquafaba. He wanted an alternative to eggs when preparing meringues.
Protein and starch are the only ingredients of aquafaba. It doesn’t have any other additives. Cold aquafaba can be whisked like an egg white. Next time I will try to prepare some meringues with aquafaba, but now I would like to share with you the recipe for an extremely simple chocolate whip. I served it with the sub acid from an apricot mousse. My children were delighted, and so were we.
Ingredients (for 4 people)
200 ml of aquafaba (from one tin of chickpeas)
2 teaspoons of caster sugar
150 g of dark chocolate
6 apricots
2 tablespoons of lemon juice
2 tablespoons of brown sugar
Melt the chocolate in a bain-marie and leave it to cool down a little. Whip the aquafaba in a very clean glass bowl. Add the sugar spoon by spoon and whip constantly until the foam is stiff and glossy. Add the chocolate and stir thoroughly but gently. Put the chocolate whip into some small bowls and leave in the fridge for 3-4 hours. Wash the apricots and remove the stones. Put them into a pan with the lemon juice and sugar. Boil until the apricots are soft and the juice has evaporated a bit. Blend the fruit. Leave to cool down. Put the apricots onto the chocolate whip and decorate with some peppermint leaves.
Source and photo: Katarzyna Posłuszny
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