Floating Island With Apricot Creme Anglaise

- Total Time
- 1 hour plus cooling and chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1and ½ tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
- 225grams sugar (about 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons)
- 8egg whites, at room temperature (about 1 cup)
- 1gram fine sea salt (about ¼ teaspoon)
- 1gram cream of tartar (about ¼ teaspoon)
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- 75grams almond flour (about ⅔ cup)
- 1and ½ cups milk
- 4egg yolks
- 100grams sugar (about ½ cup)
- Pinch salt
- 6small apricots, pitted and roughly chopped
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- Sliced almonds and slivered apricots, for garnish, optional
For the Meringue
For the Apricot Crème Anglaise
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the meringue: Heat oven to 250 degrees. Butter the inside of a 2-quart soufflé mold or baking dish, at least 3 and ½ inches deep, then use 2 tablespoons sugar to coat butter, knocking out excess over the sink.
- Step 2
Using an electric mixer set on medium-slow speed, beat egg whites until they begin to froth. Add salt and cream of tartar, increase speed to fast, and continue to beat until whites hold soft peaks. Add remaining sugar a tablespoon at a time and beat until whites hold stiff peaks. Beat in vanilla. Using a rubber spatula, gently fold in almond flour.
- Step 3
Spoon mixture into the prepared dish and smooth the top. It might overfill the dish; that’s O.K. Do not press mixture down. Bake until meringue has risen at least ½ inch and is very lightly colored on top, 30 to 40 minutes. Let cool at room temperature for 30 minutes, then refrigerate for at least 1 hour and up to 1 day.
- Step 4
Prepare the crème Anglaise: In a medium, heavy saucepan, bring milk to a simmer. In a bowl, vigorously whisk together yolks, sugar and salt until pale yellow and thick. Whisking constantly, dribble in about half of the hot milk. (Don’t stop whisking or you risk curdling the eggs.) Pour yolk mixture into the pan with the rest of the milk and gently cook over low heat, stirring constantly and thoroughly, especially around the sides of the pan. When mixture starts to thicken enough to coat the spoon, about 5 minutes, add apricots and cook for 2 minutes longer, just enough to soften the fruit, while continuing to stir.
- Step 5
Transfer apricot mixture to a food processor or blender, add vanilla and purée until just smooth. Don’t overdo it: you don’t want a mousse-like froth. Chill until serving, at least 1 hour and up to 3 days.
- Step 6
Run a knife around the sides of the meringue to loosen it from the dish and unmold it onto a large platter or, even better, into a wide, shallow bowl. The sugar syrup that’s formed will run down the sides of the meringue. Pour apricot crème Anglaise around the island, creating a pale orange sea. Serve garnished with sliced almond and apricots, if you like.
Private Notes
Comments
Julia Child would be shocked at calling this recipe Floating Island… In the traditional one, meringue "eggs," -- fluffy and really egg-shaped, are cooked in the milk which is then used for the custard. You could use the above recipe as a start and add the apricots to the custard, and then "float" the egg islands on top. That would be a Floating Island desert.
While this is more like "Floating Pavlova", it sounds delicious without being cloyingly sweet. The apricot crème anglaise is an inspired idea. Another gem from Melissa Clark.
If fresh apricots are unavailable, can dried or frozen apricots or a different fresh fruit be substituted?
Wow outstanding! Served this stunning dessert to a dinner party with a few tweaks. It’s not at all a floating pavlova, as the meringue is cooked briefly in the oven and then chilled, mimicking texture of poached meringue. Less sugar is the way to go with the crème anglaise (see David Tanis’s recipe), as are more yolks and heavy cream (see Dorie Greenspan’s). Cardamom, lemon, vanilla bean, and peaches were a wonderful flavor combination, but the technique here is an excellent one.
Following the recipe carefully, this dessert was relatively easy to make. Melissa's cautionary notes helped avoid potential challenges. Unlike some desserts this one tasted good on the second day. Next time I would try to have the creme Anglaise thicker and not so soupy....perhaps cooking it a bit longer or using more egg yolks. Delicious
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