Homemade Caviar
If he can do it, I can, and set out to making my own caviar. I made two types, Cointreau (clear) and White Port wine (golden), but I guess you can make it from just about anything that sets in the cold: fish stock, Madeira and onion gravy, fruit juice, ale, be my guest.
It’s actually pretty straight-forward to make, although I will admit its a bit of a palaver. But, you’d only do it once in a while, and you won’t make more than a teaspoon for each of your diners. Just like with real caviar.
Step 1:
Find a flat bottom bowl or dish that can take two fingers deep of vegetable oil. For once, use the dullest, least aromatic oil you can find – I used what I buy for maintenance of woks and non-stick pans and pots. So, pour two fingers deep of said oil, cling film it, and deep freeze it for 3 hours.
Step 2:
Check how your oil is doing. It must still be fluid, but more like thick honey.
Step 3:
Make the caviar mix. You might want to reduce the port wine, or clarify the stock. Make sure it is cold, then add just enough gelatine to set it. For my first Cointreau and port wine caviar experiment, I did nothing, just added gelatine.
Step 4:
Remove oil from freezer, and slowly drip drop after drop of the caviar mix into the vey cold oil.
Step 5:
Let sit for a couple of seconds, in which time the oil chills down each caviar pearl, and sets it. Then take the pearls out (using slotted spoons, forks, whatever), clean with kitchen paper and greaseproof paper.
Serve as fancy decoration. Or, mentally put it onto the list for The Alice Project, for those of you who know what The Alice Project is. It’s still alive!















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