Gelatin dessert
A variety of packaged gelatin desserts | |
Type | Dessert |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Gelatin |
Cookbook: Gelatin dessert Media: Gelatin dessert |
Gelatin desserts are desserts made with sweetened and flavored gelatin.
They can be made by combining plain gelatin with other ingredients or by using a premixed blend of gelatin with additives. Fully prepared gelatin desserts are sold in a variety of forms, ranging from large decorative shapes to individual serving cups.
Regional names
- In many of the Commonwealth nations including Canada and in Ireland, gelatin desserts are called jelly.
- In the United States, gelatin desserts are sometimes colloquially called jello or sometimes gelatin, whereas "jelly" is colloquially a fruit preserve.
Brands
Popular brands of premixed gelatin include:
- Aeroplane Jelly in Australia
- Hartley's in the United Kingdom
- Jell-O from Kraft Foods and Royal from Jel Sert in North America
History
Before gelatin became widely available as a commercial product, the most typical gelatin dessert was "calf's foot jelly". As the name indicates, this was made by extracting and purifying gelatin from the foot of a calf. This gelatin was then mixed with fruit juice and sugar.[1]
In the eighteenth century, gelatin from calf's feet, isinglass and hartshorn was colored blue with violet juice, yellow with saffron, red with cochineal and green with spinach and allowed to set in layers in small, narrow glasses. It was flavored with sugar, lemon juice and mixed spices. This preparation was called jelly; Hannah Glasse was the first to record the use of this jelly in trifle in her The Art of Cookery.[2]
Preparation
To make a gelatin dessert, gelatin is dissolved in hot liquid with the desired flavors and other additives. These latter ingredients usually include sugar, fruit juice, or sugar substitutes; they may be added and varied during preparation, or pre-mixed with the gelatin in a commercial product which merely requires the addition of hot water.
In addition to sweeteners, the prepared commercial blends generally contain flavoring agents and other additives, such as adipic acid, fumaric acid, sodium citrate, and artificial flavorings and food colors. Because the collagen is processed extensively, the final product is not categorized as a meat or animal product by the US federal government.
Prepared commercial blends may be sold as a powder or as a concentrated gelatinous block, divided into small squares. Either type is mixed with sufficient hot water to completely dissolve it, and then mixed with enough cold water to make the volume of liquid specified on the packet.
The solubility of powdered gelatin can be enhanced by sprinkling it into the liquid several minutes before heating, "blooming" the individual granules.[3] The fully dissolved mixture is then refrigerated, slowly forming a colloidal gel as it cools.
Gelatin desserts may be enhanced in many ways, such as using decorative molds, creating multicolored layers by adding a new layer of slightly cooled liquid over the previously-solidified one, or suspending non-soluble edible elements such as marshmallows or fruit. Some types of fresh fruit and their unprocessed juices are incompatible with gelatin desserts; see the Chemistry section below.
When fully chilled, the most common ratios of gelatin to liquid (as instructed on commercial packaging) usually result in a custard-like texture which can retain detailed shapes when cold but melts back to a viscous liquid when warm. A recipe calling for the addition of additional gelatin to regular jelly gives a rubbery product that can be cut into shapes with cookie cutters and eaten with fingers (called "Knox Blox" by the Knox company, makers of unflavored gelatin). Higher gelatin ratios can be used to increase the stability of the gel, culminating in gummy candies which remain rubbery solids at room temperature (see Bloom (test)).
Gelatin shots
A gelatin shot (usually called a Jell-O shot in North America and vodka jelly or jelly shot in the UK and Australia) is a shooter in which liquor, usually vodka, rum, tequila, or neutral grain spirit, replaces some of the water or fruit juice that is used to congeal the gel.
The American satirist and mathematician Tom Lehrer claims to have invented the gelatin shot in the 1950s while working for the National Security Agency, where he developed vodka gelatin as a way to circumvent a restriction of alcoholic beverages on base.[4] An early published recipe for an alcoholic gelatin drink dates from 1862, found in How to Mix Drinks, or The Bon Vivant's Companion by Jerry Thomas: his recipe for "Punch Jelly" calls for the addition of isinglass or other gelatin to a punch made from cognac, rum, and lemon juice.[5][6]
Gelatin substitutes
Other culinary gelling agents can be used instead of animal-derived gelatin. These plant-derived substances are more similar to pectin and other gelling plant carbohydrates than to gelatin proteins; their physical properties are slightly different, creating different constraints for the preparation and storage conditions. These other gelling agents may also be preferred for certain traditional cuisines or dietary restrictions.
Agar, a product made from red algae,[7] is the traditional gelling agent in many Asian desserts. Agar is a popular gelatin substitute in quick jelly powder mix and prepared dessert gels that can be stored at room temperature. Compared to gelatin, agar preparations require a higher dissolving temperature, but the resulting gels congeal more quickly and remain solid at higher temperatures, 104 °F (40 °C),[8] as opposed to 59 °F (15 °C)[9] for gelatin. Vegans and vegetarians can use agar to replace animal-derived gelatin.
Carrageenan is also derived from seaweed, and lacks agar's occasionally unpleasant smell during cooking. It sets more firmly than agar and is often used in kosher and halal cooking.
Konjac is a gelling agent used in many Asian foods, including the popular konnyaku fruit jelly candies.
Chemistry
Gelatin consists of partially hydrolyzed collagen, a protein which is highly abundant in animal tissues such as bone and skin. Although many gelatin desserts incorporate fruit, some fresh fruits contain proteolytic enzymes; these enzymes cut the gelatin molecule into peptides (protein fragments) too small to form a firm gel. The use of such fresh fruits in a gelatin recipe results in a dessert that never "sets".
Specifically, pineapple contains the protease (protein cutting enzyme) bromelain, kiwi fruit contains actinidin, figs contain ficain, and papaya contains papain. Cooking or canning denatures and deactivates the proteases, so canned pineapple, for example, works fine in a gelatin dessert.
Safety
Although eating tainted beef can lead to New Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (the human variant of mad-cow disease, bovine spongiform encephalopathy), there is no known case of BSE having been transmitted through collagen products such as gelatin.[10]
See also
Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on |
- Almond jelly
- Aspic
- Jello salad, a variation on gelatin desserts that include other ingredients
- Jelly bean
- Götterspeise
- List of desserts
References
- ↑ The Picayune's Creole Cookbook p. 288
- ↑ Glasse, Hannah. To make hartshorn jelly. The Art of Cookery (1774 ed.). p. 285.
- ↑ "Unflavored Gelatin - Using Gelatin In Your Cooking".
- ↑ "That Was the Wit That Was". SF Weekly.
- ↑ Thomas, Jerry. "How to Mix Drinks, Or, The Bon-vivant's Companion". google.com.
- ↑ The Joy of Mixology by Gary Regan. Clarkson Potter, 2003. Pages 15-16, 150.
- ↑ "All About Agar".
- ↑ "Agar Plates Bacterial Culture". Retrieved 11 January 2009.
- ↑ "Gelation and Stiffening Power of Gelatin". Retrieved 11 January 2009.
- ↑ Spongiform Encephalopathy Advisory Committee (SEAC) (1992–2000). "BSE inquiry: A consideration of the possible hazard of gelatin to man".
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gelatin. |
- Jelly, Flummery and Creams
- Kraft Foods: Jell-O history
- Cooper Union history page
- Peter Brears Jellies and Their Moulds Prospect Books 2010
- Ian Day (blog) Macedoine and other eccentric Victorian jellies