Eton mess - most British dessert ever?
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- Опубліковано 14 чер 2024
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**TRADITIONAL RECIPE, SERVES FOUR**
2 egg whites
1 lb (454g) fresh strawberries
1 pint (473mL) cream
1/2 cup (50g) granulated sugar, plus a little more for the cream and berries
starch
vanilla
cream of tartar (can replace with few drops of lemon juice)
salt
The night before, beat the egg whites with a pinch of cream of tartar to stiff peaks, then gradually beat in the sugar until you have a stiff, fluffy meringue. Mix in a tiny pinch of salt and a splash of vanilla.
Line a baking sheet with parchment and deposit the meringue in dollops. Bake at 225ºF/110ºC for about an hour, until the meringues don't look wet on the surface anymore (they should still look shiny). Turn the heat off and let the meringues sit in the oven overnight to dry.
Also ideally the night before, quarter the strawberries and put 2/3 of them in a small pot, along with a big spoon or two of sugar and a small spoon of starch. Heat until the strawberries soften and release enough liquid to dissolve the sugar and gelatinize the starch. If the pan seems too dry and is threatening to burn, splash in some water (or booze).
When the berries are just soft enough to crush, mash them with a potato masher or puree them smooth. Allow to cool fully, and reserve the uncooked berries.
The next day, stir in the raw berries with the chilled cooked berries. Crush the meringues into chunks. Whip the cream, then mix in a splash of vanilla and a little sugar to taste.
Assemble the mess right before you eat, or the meringue will dissolve. I like about two parts whipped cream to one part strawberries and one part meringue by volume, but you do you.
You can either stir all the components together or layer them into a glass, like a parfait. I like to use meringue for the top layer so those pieces stay dry and crunchy.
**CHOCOLATE & BANNA RECIPE, SERVES 4-6**
2 eggs
2-3 bananas
1 pint (473mL) cream
1/2 cup (50g) granulated sugar, plus a little more for the cream
1 cup (237mL) milk
butter
cocoa powder
starch
flour
vanilla
cream of tartar (can replace with few drops of lemon juice)
salt
The night before, separate the eggs and beat the egg whites with a pinch of cream of tartar to stiff peaks, then gradually beat in the sugar until you have a stiff, fluffy meringue. Mix in a tiny pinch of salt, a splash of vanilla, and spoon or two of cocoa powder.
Line a baking sheet with parchment and deposit the meringue in dollops. Bake at 225ºF/110ºC for about an hour, until the meringues don't look wet on the surface anymore (they should still look shiny). Turn the heat off and let the meringues sit in the oven overnight to dry.
Also ideally the night before, put the egg yolks in a small pot with about a tablespoon of starch, a teaspoon of flour, a tiny pinch of salt, a splash of vanilla and just enough of the milk to help you whisk this unto a smooth paste. Whisk in the rest of the milk and bring to a boil, whisking constantly until it is thick and bubbling. Whisk in a couple tablespoons of butter then chill completely. That's pastry cream.
The next day, whip the cream, then mix in a splash of vanilla and a little sugar to taste. Mix the whipped cream with a roughly equal quantity of the pastry cream by volume.
Crumble the meringues into chunks and slice the bananas. Assemble the mess right before you eat, or the meringue will dissolve. For this version I like about three parts creme diplomat (the cream mixture) to one part banana slices and one part meringue by volume, but you do you.
You can either stir all the components together or layer them into a glass, like a parfait. I like to use meringue for the top layer so those pieces stay dry and crunchy. - Навчання та стиль
As a Brit I thoroughly approve of your adaptations, and would also suggest that chopped pistachios can be a lovely addition, giving an extra dimension to the taste, texture and colour
nah pistachios too flavorful for the average brit
Agreed, hazelnuts are more my level Source: Brit
I'm British and don't know anyone that eats this dessert
Color* I got u
@@jettnash5217 Would maybe toasted walnuts work? I love them.
I appreciate that Adam doesn't just follow a recipe and then call it a day - he experiments with different preparations, gives a lot of good tips regarding technique, and incorporates food science into even basic cooking. It's a unique blend of elements that you don't often see on cooking channels, and is really interesting to watch.
Finally its here. YES
ua-cam.com/video/GTHlCk7fEOY/v-deo.html
The experimentation are good _after_ you've made or tried the original.
@@Ronaldo-eu1nz true npc behavior
Exactly
It's pretty common here in the UK to find '... Mess', where the pub/restaurant etc has basically used up whatever fruit they have to make a variation on Eton Mess. It's quite easy to make in big batches, the presentation is easy and who doesn't like fruit, cream and meringue?
mess hall
Powdered sugar in the US, is a mix of sugar and corn starch. That could be causing the issues you are seeing with the powered sugar meringues. If you want a finer sugar grain you'd want to take the granulated sugar and grind it more, like with a food processor or spice grinder.
White cotton candy sugar should be perfect
Perhaps a cleaned coffee grinder could work too?
I tried it myself and let me say. Don't use a food processor for that. It's like grinding sand at extreme speed, the food processor will get so hot so fast it will be fuming in seconds
@@boliosbread They use corn starch or potato starch as an anti-caking agent to prevent clumping.
@@boliosbread To thicken anything you add the sugar to, like icing. American recipes expect 10% corn starch when they call for powdered sugar. If you want what Brits call powdered sugar you need to look for "extra fine" sugar.
Love from Britain, where our government is an Eton mess.
yum
was looking for this comment
And then on top there's those socialist pensions. How are you going to pay your £600,000 share?
Lmao
The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, as they say.
entrance hidden by bricks and rubble
Entrance hidden by whipped cream and meringue
Entrance hidden by bricks and rubble:
Honestly, for me, the takeaway ('lesson', not food) from this vid is that gin and macerated strawberries is probably a delicious summertime combo that I should make asap
Absolutely excited to do this!
It is! Honestly, just about any liquor will taste good with the strawberries. I like to make a slushy with strawberry and Cruzan aged light rum as the base drink. Mint makes an amazing garnish as it really adds to the experience.
Try using Brachetto (Italian sparkling red wine), you'll never look back!
try pims and straberries!
Gin Tonic with raspberries is my favourite drink, I am sure it works with strawberries
How is it a british dessert if there's no beans?
I'm british and i think beans are disgusting
There's an Filipino desert called "haluhalo" made with boiled beans
British cuisine draws more from India than the east Asian countries that do beans in dessert.
add some
@@joshuabanton3472 not a proper Brit then
Hello, a Brit here with another interpretation: use brown sugar in the meringues to make them have a chewy, toffee-like texture in the middle. Then whip the cream but don’t make it super sweet. Make a caramel sauce. Dollop the cream, add some slices of banana, crumble the meringue on top, drizzle the caramel, and top it off with crushed-up mcvities digestive biscuits. It’s delicious I promise
Woh, that sounds amazing. I much prefer chewy meringue
yes something like dulce de lec would go great with this.
I think language and dialects are fascinating, but sometimes I get a little lost and confused, too. Like, what is the point of calling it a digestive biscuit? Does that mean it's food that you can digest? Wouldn't that apply to all food? Are there kinds of biscuits that are un-digestive or non-digestive? Having not grown up eating these, nor having seen _any_ commercials (or is it "advertisements"?) for them, it just seems so weird to me.
Sounds like a decadant banana cream pie, I have to try it now!
@@Eric1SanDiego1 they have sodium bicarbonate in them which helps ease indigestion
Adam, I have a very strong appreciation for how you find the unnecessary steps in fussy recipes and simplify it for the everyday home cook. I’m curious to know if any of the steps claimed to be so crucial in croissant making could be eliminated or simplified… would love to see your take!
Unrelated note, I made your deboned turkey for Thanksgiving last year and I don’t ever plan on making it any other way, it was amazing!
Like which step do you think might be unnecessary in croissant?
It's fold and turn several times and I am reaaally trying to think about which step could be removed, shortened, eased. That would definitely make it more accessible.
@@FutureCommentary1 They don't know which is why they're asking.
@Future Commentary and @Vinh Bui I guess I’m mostly asking if it’s necessary to chill the dough/butter between literally every step, do I have to be so precise with my measurements (inches/centimeters when rolling out the dough), does European butter really make a difference, and also Adam’s creative ways of finding simpler ways to complete tasks that I just never think to do.
@@samanthaday7844 I'm not sure about the rest of that, but I *can* definitively say that yes, you absolutely *do* need to chill the dough between steps. Because even if you're using machines, just the warmth of the air around you, compared to the temperature in the fridge, is enough to start partially melting the butter, thus completely throwing off the entire texture of the finished product. It needs to be kept as solid as possible until it's time to bake, or you get a completely different product.
@@samanthaday7844 the French are very into their butters, many choices and regions of milk, as well as grade. Generally the butter is of nicer taste in France imo.
In the UK we have our preferences but mainly from what its made of (olive oil, sunflower oil, veg oil, UK milk, Danish milk, margarine, hybrids etc).
Powdered sugar where I live always has cornstarch incorporated to reduce caking. That messes with the food chemistry.
Then you need to hunt down *pure* icing/powdered sugar. At worst, you could have to hunt it out somewhere that sells cake decorating supplies, as some decorating icings and fondants need to be made with unadulterated sugar.
Search for confectioners sugar in the baking aisle, it's powdered sugar without the cornstarch.
@@Toastybees wrong and obese
So that's why my macarons have always been coming out bad recently
You can stick sugar in a spice blender to powder it
If your strawberries are not intense enough, try adding a little balsamic vinegar and leaving in the fridge for around 2 hours - sounds odd but really amplifies the flavour...
Balsamic vinegar is delicious with strawberries. A healthy amount of balsamic vinegar is so good with watermelon and peaches.
Quite surprised, would have thought of balsamic as something to give a savoury kick...
Then again, never used it.
Vanilla is better for me personally. Same job but a better taste.
@@oscarcacnio8418 Balsamic vinegar is actually quite sweet, with only a tinge of sour! You should give it a try, it might surprise you
@@RafaelGarcia022 yes! Just be sure to get balsamico that has a higher ratio of cooked grape must to wine vinegar. The real balsamico is made of only cooked grape must and not any vinegar; but that's absurdly expensive and hard to find.
My dad used/uses to make this dessert a lot of times! And I'm Brazilian!
He said that he saw and ate this recipe at a restaurant and started to copying it. We call this dessert "Moranguinho com Suspiro", literally, "Little Strawberries with Sigh" (Sigh being the name for the Meringue Cookies).
A stapple in my family too. Although the serving is different and we also eat it with fios de ovos.
I will say, you mentioned how it wasn't Strawberry-y enough, When in season English strawberries are like no other. I've had international friends say they've never had strawberries as good anywhere else
Have they tried Polish strawberries though? 🙃😉
I'm Brtitish and agree in season strawberries here are truly special - but i think thats more because local in-season fruit tastes best, wherever you are.
I ate a bananna right off the tree in Tenerife once and it was a trancendental experience, never tasted anything like it.
Same in Scotland, raspberries are excellent too.
@@AnnaEmilka The reason the polish flag has red!
Seriously though, the polish breeds (that I know of) are definitely on another level
@@jamiebirley That reminds me of eating bell peppers in Portugal. They were unbelievably good.
I never thought to call meringue nests “biscuits”, but when you bring it up it’s cursed
i’m honestly offended he calls them biscuits. i don’t even like meringues
@@spaceshipboys7336 likewise. Meringue is not a biscuit. It's just meringue.
@@shkacatou indeed, a biscuit is usually twice baked anyway
@@xander1052 That's where the *word* comes from but I don't think it's actually true of most things we call biscuits.
I guess it's because Americans call them 'meringue cookies' so the direct translation would be 'meringue biscuits', but it does seem insane to me, in Aus we'd just call them meringues. When I think of a biscuit, I think of something with fat and flour in it
3:20
this story is just amazing
I believe the plural you were looking for for Calyx is "Calyces", like Matrix and Matrices!
Those chocolate meringues with a soft/gooey center sound amazing and I need to make those now.
It is indeed calyces!
Kayla-seas
Yup. Calyces. For what it's worth, I'm a biologist.
I just made an Eton mess on Sunday! It’s my favourite summertime dessert 😋
Hi, Evan!
I love eton mess, its actually worth making meringues even if you aren't experience because the appearance doesnt matter.
Long live the empire.
Might as well make a pavlova if it's for a crowd.
Well, I think if you can buy them near you, sometimes it just isn't worth the hassle. Appearances don't matter, but the fact my kitchen temperature will rise from firing an oven does.
Amazing vid, and REALLY amazing ad. Literally laughed out loud. U funny Rags
collab soon? 👀
The first recipe I’ve seen with an additional recipe using the leftover ingredients. Adam you’re seriously stepping up the cooking vid game
Eton Mess is generally more of a southern England thing, in my opinion the most British desert is sticky toffee pudding or any fruit crumble 😁
Warm sticky toffee pudding with toffee sauce and a scoop of vanilla ice cream and I’m in heaven
Oh yes, that's a good shout. I'd love a sticky toffee pudding video on this channel
Agreed. Eton Mess feels a bit old fashioned as well. Not sure many people even in the south are eating it regularly.
Being a southern Brit with northern blood, apple crumble never fails to bring the entire family together
Fruit crumble is glorious. I do like sticky toffee pudding, but crumble is much better, at least in my opinion.
I grew up with something similar in Sweden, but the "standard" version uses banana and adds chocolate sauce, and usually ice cream as well. We don't tend to sweeten whipped cream in Sweden - I personally don't think it needs sweetening, it's usually served with sweet things and used to moderate that sweetness a bit, but that is of course just a matter of preference.
What is it called
@@arijan-itanmuratovic7495 Marängsviss
US milk lacks the flavor that you can typically find in milk throughout Europe, so unsweetened whipped cream tends to fall flat
my brother used to live in the UK and found that their milk,cream whatever most of their products actually just had way more sugar in them then what you would find anywhere in sweden he had a particulary nasty surprise the first time he went for a glass of milk, he recalls it being as sweet as a coke would be here in sweden.
@@arijan-itanmuratovic7495 marängsviss, from French "meringue Suisse" :)
Eton mess or, more formally, Boris Johnson.
Lol
I love making connections from one video to another, while learning about cooking at the same time. You really are one of a kind Adam. Love your content!
A lot of British foods, such as tea and fish and chips, have roots in food from overseas, but did you know that creme brûlée is the inverse?
It likely started off in a similar way to Eton Mess (a college dish) and it was called Cambridge Burnt Cream. Creme Catalana predates the two, yes, but there are substantial differences between it and brûlée so I’d say they’re different food
I also like how "French Custard" is an english thing referencing france and "creme anglaise" is a french thing referencing england
I like your variations. Although I feel I must point out, we don't say "meringue cookies" or "meringue biscuits", just "meringues".
Also: If you can't find caster sugar, just "blitz" granulated sugar in the blender for a few seconds.
I don't think he was necessarily going for the common British terminology on that one. In the USA we'll call them cookies to distinguish from the fresh form off meringue, and then i think Adam was suggesting they're more accurately biscuits than cookies.
@@sirfizz6518 I'm American and tbh this video is my first time hearing them called "merengue cookies" instead of merengues
I always have an immense appreciation for the British translation Adam, although as far as I know, we just call them meringues rather than meringue biscuits or cookies :)
something about calling them cookies or biscuits irks me😭
I have replayed this video so many times over the years. This is a simple dessert that just speaks to the soul. Something I can keep eating/viewing for the rest of my life easily.
I just found your videos the other day and it is maybe my new favourite youtube channel. I'm a physicist, so I absolutely love the scientific perspective you give. I always want to know why a recipe is telling me to do something, or how it works, but more often than not it feels like you're supposed to take it at face value. So this channel is really scratching an itch I've had for a long time without realising.
I love adams thumbnails. Straight to the point, and his own style that I can tell without looking that it is HIS video. 10/10
Thank you for explaining the difference between "public" schools and public schools. Even some of my fellow Brits don't seem to understand that and it's mainly an England thing. In Scotland, a "public" school is indeed a public school.
The use of "public" to describe a posh, elite, private school is because the original distinction was between a school that allowed people to join and be taught in groups, rather than say a private tutor (thus public vs private) but then when actual public schools (as in anyone can attend and were actually required to) started, the holding onto the term "public school" for private school became more a way to help people who could go to such schools pretend to not be privileged. MOST UK politicians tend to come from public schools (and, oddly, from Eton) and it helps portray them as relatable when of course, it really doesn't.
The UK has a real problem with class distinction and "which school you went to" is one of the last holdouts of institutional class distinction (literally).
I thought it was to distinguish between private schools available only to certain families or professions and public schools who'll basically take any riff raff who can afford the fees.
What do they call actual public schools?
@@DarkLordDeimos State schools, or comp(rehensive)s
I thought public schools were so called because of the public school act - which said that the schools had to take any member of the public so long as they paid the fees, unlike convents and churches and estate tutors who had complete discretion in choosing their students - and the benefit they got for accepting the indignity of accepting people just because they had money, even if they lacked status, was royal charter?
Politicians tend to come from Eton because politics is more about connections than anything else.
Groups of people stuffed into classrooms and the same fields will form connections, and people send their children to Eton to make connections, so it's a self-sustaining cycle
love that every one of your videos sends me down a new rabbit hole of cooking, got here from the mousse video and im sure ill find tons of stuff that stems from this one (as usual)
So much to like about this dish. - Simple, easy to prepare and versatile. - And very forgiving on the quantities and variations in the ingredients. - I've seen it with other fruits, broken biscuits ( cookies) in the mix, or with a sprinkle of sugar on the top, and a dash of with various spirits and liquers too. - Once can also put slivers or zest of citrous fruit on top too, to make it look even more attractive. TY for highlighting this classic.
I have been waiting for the egg yolk + egg white synthesis dessert recipe video for SO LONG. Praise be!!! I can't wait to try this!
Try a lemon meringue pie sometime. The pie filling is full of yolks!
5:16 Why am I not surprised that Adam just has a giant jug of vanilla lying around somewhere
Costco does massive bottles?
Do you not?
Everyone who makes deserts should, and you can add it to pancakes
@@human-tk2fo What I meant was the size of the bottle, mine are tiny
@@acommenter4252mine are literally just tiny vials or flasks lol
fun fact: there is a german desert called "schneegestöbere" (roughly translating to the act of milling around in snow) which is very similar to the parfait/layerd version of the eton mess shown in this video, although the german version is made with a sweetened quark or yogurt cream, and with a mixture of pureé'd fruit and equally layered with meringue.
i'm not sure to what extent these dishes are related, if at all, but it is still interesting to see how similar they are.
To be honest, it wouldn't be too surprising that people all around Europe eventually stumbled into loosely mixing fruit, cream and meringues after all 3 were readily available around the continent
I guess if you used Himbeeren it would be Schneegestrawberry, huh? ;)
Us brits wouldn’t really even count meringue as a biscuit
Agreed. It's not a cookie or a biscuit!
But it's also not a cake... so what is it?
@@Stefan-bu6ms idk really…not all deserts are biscuits or cakes haha. It is what it is
This dessert is summer in a bowl, best use of fresh strawberries imho
One of my favourite desserts of all time. I add some raspberries to the mix and macerate along with some Chambord, a French black raspberry liqueur. Yum!
Thank you Adam for your fantastic experiments, definitely trying this 🙏🏻
I love how many desserts you’ve put on my radar. I think I made soufflé 6 times in a few weeks! Sticky toffee pudding next please! My favourite.
I don't know about "most British dessert", it's something you get in restaurants occasionally but I've never had it at home once. Summer pudding on the other hand, that's a family classic for me. And crumble is a go-to all year round.
This was a great video love how just a few ingredients can do so much
Adam, one of my favorite things about your channel is that you follow up your food history/science videos with relevant recipes. I’m sure it’s efficient for you production-wise, but it’s also a lot of fun for those of us trying these out to get to say, “I have extra knowledge about why you can’t make meringue with egg yolk!” In some odd way it really helps me feel connected to the food I’m making. Thank you for another awesome recipe!
You didn't mention the spurious origin story - it was allegedly a pavlova for the boys' lunch / afternoon tea at a picnic, but was bashed around / sat on.
Commercial powdered sugar has cornstarch mixed in to keep it from clumping. This is great for making frosting, but not so much for meringues. The cornstarch pulls out the water from the egg foam collapsing the foam (my theory anyway).
Maybe in America. I've checked and haven't found any of the powdered sugars where I've lived in Europe to contain starch. DADDY in France and Dansukker in Norway/Denmark are the most popular brands in their respective countries and neither contain any starch
@@oivinf I don't doubt your information. However, the maker of the video (and I) are both in the US and most, if not all, brands of powdered sugar here add corn starch.
Nah I think it’s cause it’s powdered vs granulated. They just don’t work the same. He basically made royal icing
very calming very comforting
Eton mess is great in the summer, might have to give your version a go
I’ve never heard about this desert, but my favorite desert here in argentina is merenguitos (those little meringues) crushed and layered with cream and dulce de leche and then i like to leave it a couple hours in the freezer. The best thing ever
Sounds delicious!
Hey Adam, I think you’d really dig a similar recipe from Scotland called Cranachan. It’s the whipped cream but with raspberries, toasted oats and a nip of whisky.
I make that all the time except I increase the whiskey and replace the cream, raspberries, and oats with frozen water.
It’s so fun to read this with a fake Scottish accent
Thank you for being the person to finally explain what Chantilly(?) cream is. I had heard the term but people were basically like 'you know' about it.
That last version with the chocolate meringue and creme diplomat is mouth watering!
You'd really want English/Scottish strawberries for Eton mess, completely different flavour.
Yank here (Who lived in the UK for over three years) I saw this on menus and at peoples house parties, all over the place but the whole time I never had one. I was basically just drunk the whole time. This looks great though !
Eton mess is the single greatest pudding of all time. When the dinner ladies at school put this out you knew it was going to be a great summers day!
castor sugar is called superfine, or fruit sugar over here. It can be made by grinding granulated in a spice grinder.
Enterence hidden by bricks and rubble:
Oooo, I think I'll probably make that last recipe. Looks super tasty.
By far the most nutritionally informative and enlightening Chef/Professor on the internet
Bear in mind Adam, that although Eton Mess was originally a school lunch food, it's school lunch from literally the poshest school in the UK. A huge amount of Tory MP's were educated there, so there'd probably have been a lot of "My father will hear about this!" in regards to the quality of the food.
so i assume thats where all the big tories come from?
@@MrMickio1 Yes.
He says it’s from Eton College and: “posh schoolboy food” right at the beginning, so I think he’s aware of that.
I don't doubt that there were more than a few dissenting voices when the decision to serve a dropped pavlova to the boys was made!
Tories are horrible but better than the alternatives. We need a real far right party in the UK
The amount of swipes at British people (what the Brits would call English) is just peak Adam energy. I love it.
No swipes that I saw - he's acknowledging that people in different countries have different terms for things than Americans. It's really nice that Adam takes the trouble to adapt his terminology to cater for people living outside the US.
@@DaveF. Yeah, ik, it's just a joke ;)
Wait what?? You think British people who aren't from England call themselves English?
@@Sprecherfuchs No, it was just a joke to try to fit in another Adam catchphrase. He often says: "What the Brits would call ___", and I wanted to include that in my joke comment.
Caster sugar can be found in the US--it's labeled superfine sugar and was originally meant to be used in cool liquids where you want it to dissolve quickly (e.g., iced tea). Domino and C&H are two common brands. You'll occasionally find it labeled baker's sugar. I usually just carefully blitz regular granulated sugar in the food processor until it is fine, but not powdered.
Excellent as always
"I say, fancy a mess?"
"Indubitably! I shall fire up the grill."
That intro makes me truly relish in how we confuse Americans with our language all the time
To be fair, half of your language is other more consistent languages
@@pennyforyourthots As long as we piss Americans off nothing else matters
I love your videos it make me fall asleep easily and peacefully
My aunt would make something like this and bring it to family gatherings. She always called me on my birthday without fail. This brought back some nice memories, thanks Adam :)
Never heard meringues refereed to as "cookies" in Britain, are they called cookies commonly in the US?
I don't know about the US, but the time I visited Germany I found a cookie store chain there and they had a whole section of various flavoured merigues.
I have seen them labeled as "meringue cookies" in many grocery stores. That is also what I have heard many Americans call them.
We don’t call them cookies or biscuits cos they’re neither.
They’re their own thing, meringues
@@TheMimiSard We get meringues in bakeries too, just never heard them referred to as cookies. It was a little strange
We use meringues in a lot of different preparations, so the dried out lightly baked ones are called meringue cookies. Meringue is just whipped egg whites and sugar.
I loved finding out about "crème diplomat" on Great British Bake-Off because it's such a fancy name for whipped cream and custard, a recipe I thought I'd invented as a 6 year old.
1:07 "Beat some more until it's nice and stiff." Adam Regusea, the Legend
This looks delicious! Like a deconstructed Pavlova which is one of my favourites. I will definitely be trying this.
In my experience, when macerating berries you want to use a large volume of sugar and let them sit overnight in the fridge. Most of the flavor of the berries takes time to leach out and what comes out first is nearly all water, that might explain why the strawberry flavor was weak in your first attempt. It looks like your blender method does keep the berries more fresh feeling texture wise, so I'll have to try it both ways if I make this recipe. Great video!
The only reason he does so many experiments is so he can eat more without anyone calling him out. Guys a genius. 😋 nom nom for SCIENCE!
O M G !
I’ve been watching your channel for over 2 years now, love it.
But this ! ! ! This kills me 🤩🤩🤩
Been loving these meringue recipes lately
Looks awesome - especially intrigued about the version with pastry cream! Curious about the amount of sugar, though. You say 25g per white, and then say 50g for two whites, or half a cup, but half a cup would be 100g of sugar. It looks like the measuring cup you used was probably a half cup, so just curious which is the correct amount: 25g per white, or 50g per white?
I always use 1/4 cup of sugar per egg white for meringue cookies and that equals 50g.
Meringue is usually made with 2:1 sugar to egg whites by weight, which means about 100-150 grams of sugar for two egg whites. I was curious so I tried the amounts given by Adam and the meringues came out brown and soft with a texture that reminded me of very dense cotton candy.
Awesome video Adam!
Eton Mess is one of those things that is so simple, but oooooh so good.
break the eggs over a fine mesh sieve if you're grossed out by handling them with bare hands but then you need to wash the sieve which is why I'll die before I do that
those meringue blobs are a popular old school Brazilian desert "Suspiros" btw
The way it was done at Eaton was just the boys each getting strawberries, cream and meringue separately and mashing it all together in their bowls. My understanding is that it wasn’t a prepared dish, just something the students did with the stuff they were given for dessert.
As far as i know, It was a Pavlova that broke but they were served it and ate it anyway, and now that's how they prefer it
All the stories say the same thing, that the dessert found infamy due to a ruined pavlova-like dish which was served to the boys so not to waste the food. There are variations on what happened to the dessert, some stories say it was dropped others say a dog sat on it but they all say this is how Eton mess got its start.
I love that you have a recipe for the egg yolks. I don’t know any easy recipes with egg yolks apart from custard.
Lemon curd is an amazing thing to make with egg yolks! And it's also very British. And would also be really tasty added to Eton mess.
I’ve used super fine sugar in my meringues. I think the roughness of the granules help beat the egg white. But larger granules can make a sandy feel to the meringue. Macerating the strawberries in Cointreau is good too.
Speaking of British foods, I'd love to see a Larks' Tongues in Aspic recipe, I don't think there's a video of one on UA-cam yet.
I do think it's good
Please tell me that isn't what the name makes it sound like... Because bird tongue in gelatin sounds like the culmination of 60s kitchen horror stories.
Only if it has a 13 minute instrumental section
@@Great_Olaf5 I do believe that's exactly what it is, but I really don't know for sure because there aren't any videos and very few pictures of it to be found.
@@nahguacm I think Adam should do five videos on it, with the last one breaking with the title convention of the previous four for some reason....
That looks good
no
Ratio
You look good
It's been years since I've eaten Eton Mess but I still can taste it's divine beauty... man I should make some tomorrow
Saw this video yesterday and it's living in my head rent free since. Making this tonight just to break free from this hypnosis.
well, that was decadent
You forgot to point and laugh at a working class person, that’s the key ingredient in an Eton Mess.
I add some balsamic vinegar to the strawberries along with the sugar its sooooo good.
That sounds so wrong, but I know it would definitely work
Balsamic vinegar and black pepper.
@@peter7582 Yeah it enhances the flavour, it doesn't taste savoury at all. Whoa that's two ou's in a row just incase you didn't know i'm british.
Just watched Natasha make this same thing just a few days ago. Wow; two of my favorite UA-cam cooks. Which one will I try? Both, of course!
That's beautiful. I think I would turn into a mini trifle. Add some sponge cake cubes. It looks amazing.
Britain's looking like a bit of an Eton Mess at the moment
The Tory party is most definitely an Eton Mess
Lmao, harsh! But accurate 🤷
Castor sugar is such an amazing time saver in everyday life
it desolves into everything so much quicker, and gives a much less granular mouth feel when you sprinkle it on anything
all for like 10p more per bag
You can also just make caster sugar by blending granulated sugar a bit. Only ever done meringue with caster or golden caster!
hey adam, brit here, i love your version with the blitzed strawberries and folded in, i have always disliked eton mess because it’s a clumsy mix of meringue, strawberries and whipped cream, so your version really suits me. i’d love for you to try a classic/your own version of a sticky toffee pudding, one of my all time favourite desserts!
Good Timing, I am leaving for England on the 20th. Hopefully I'll give this dessert a try.
Weirdly we always call it school 'dinners' even if we eat it at lunch time. The people who serve it are traditionally known as 'dinner ladies' as well.
Whilst at the same time we call it “lunch time” hahaha
@@jackogrady3118 And if you bring your own food you have a "packed lunch".
A lot of places in the midlands and up north call their morning meal "breakfast", their afternoon meal "dinner" and their evening meal "tea"
i come from the south and moved to the midlands, and my girlfriend who has always lived here insists that despite *not* being the main meal, the afternoon meal it's still dinner!
Etymologically speaking, "dinner" is meant to refer to your main meal of the day, which means that depending on the size and heartiness, either your lunch or your supper could also be your dinner.
Saddam husseins hiding place
??
@@SpicyRamen1466 search it up
Love this! Do Knickerbocker Glory?