Site icon Saucy Dressings

How To Make A Fruit Coulis

how to make a fruit coulis

how to make a fruit coulis

A fruit coulis (from the Latin colare to strain – hence also the word ‘colander’) is a thick sauce made from puréed and strained fruit (there are also vegetable coulis). The straining is best done with a fine-meshed conical sieve.

They are quick and uncomplicated to make and, if you are artistic, you can use them like paint – to draw on swirls and zig zags of colour. This is best done by putting the coulis into a plastic squeezy bottle with a nozzle. Alternatively, if you are less skilled you can either make a large lake on your plate and drop whatever your coulis is going with in the centre of it. Or you can go for the coating/glazing option.

In addition to the types below you can also try a kiwi fruit version, blend the peeled fruit with lime juice and honey; a passion fruit version, blend the scooped out pulp and seeds with honey and some orange juice; or a plum or cherry version, mix this one with honey and kirsch.

Blackberry coulis (for about six with ice cream)

Ingredients

Method

  1. Bring the blackberries to the boil.
  2. Add the other ingredients.
  3. You can serve just as it is, but to make it into a coulis you need to liquidise and press it through a sieve.

Use with:

Mango coulis

Ingredients

Method

  1. Peel, de-stone and chop the mangoes.
  2. Cover with a little water and add the vanilla past and the sugar.
  3. Boil and simmer until the fruit is soft.
  4. Blend in a liquidiser while still warm, push it through a sieve, taste, and add more sugar if necessary.

how to use:

Peach coulis

For peach coulis, do the same as for mango coulis but use four or five peaches, depending on size.

Raspberry coulis (serves about four people over poached apples)

Ingredients

Method

  1. Bring the raspberries to the boil – in fact, you can skip this step if you want.
  2. Mix in the other ingredients.
  3. Liquidise and push through a sieve (ideally twice) using a rubber spatula.

use with:

Cheat’s method: warm 100g Tiptree seedless raspberry jam in a pan with half a tsp lemon juice… and a little water or booze to make it a bit more pourable.

Strawberry coulis:

Made with fresh (don’t be tempted to use frozen) overripe strawberries, drained green peppercorns, lemon juice, sugar, poppy seeds. It’s also good with mint.

use with:

The Dracula – an amazing mix of Coca Cola, vanilla ice cream and strawberry coulis.

Exit mobile version