Paul Ainsworth’s strawberry trifle

Paul Ainsworth’s strawberry trifle

Top chef Paul Ainsworth grew up in his parents’ guest house in Southampton and here shares a recipe from his debut cookbook, upgrading his dad’s classic trifle with fresh peak-season strawberries.

Paul Ainsworth’s strawberry trifle

“My parents’ strawberry trifle is one of my fondest food memories. When I came home from school, my dad would often be preparing it, and I’d watch, mesmerised. Running a guest house, time was of the essence – Dad used shop-bought finger biscuits, cubed strawberry jelly and, always, Bird’s custard. The dessert was made in a retro burgundy frosted-glass bowl, finished with a healthy portion of whipped cream and hundreds- and-thousands. I can still see Dad reaching into the bowl with a big spoon to pull out a perfect helping of trifle, served in matching burgundy bowls.

When recreating the Bitterne Park Guest House strawberry trifle, I wanted to stay true to the original dish yet elevate it. In summer, we make a beautiful jelly at my pub The Mariners with poached strawberries. For the custard, we make a vanilla crème anglaise and thicken it with Bird’s, which gives a malty sweetness and comforting flavour. For the topping, we mix fresh cream, mascarpone, cream cheese, crème fraîche and orange zest. For the ‘hundreds-and-thousands’, I was inspired by another childhood memory, of a friend who always had a packet of Butterkist popcorn to hand.”

Recipe taken from Paul’s first cookbook, For The Love Of Food (Pavilion £26), and tested by delicious. Paul’s Padstow restaurant, Paul Ainsworth At No 6, holds a Michelin star and is joined by nearby Med-inspired Caffé Rojano and The Mariners pub in Rock.

  • Serves icon Serves 6
  • Time icon Hands-on time 1 hour, plus cooling and at least 4 hours setting

Top chef Paul Ainsworth grew up in his parents’ guest house in Southampton and here shares a recipe from his debut cookbook, upgrading his dad’s classic trifle with fresh peak-season strawberries.

“My parents’ strawberry trifle is one of my fondest food memories. When I came home from school, my dad would often be preparing it, and I’d watch, mesmerised. Running a guest house, time was of the essence – Dad used shop-bought finger biscuits, cubed strawberry jelly and, always, Bird’s custard. The dessert was made in a retro burgundy frosted-glass bowl, finished with a healthy portion of whipped cream and hundreds- and-thousands. I can still see Dad reaching into the bowl with a big spoon to pull out a perfect helping of trifle, served in matching burgundy bowls.

When recreating the Bitterne Park Guest House strawberry trifle, I wanted to stay true to the original dish yet elevate it. In summer, we make a beautiful jelly at my pub The Mariners with poached strawberries. For the custard, we make a vanilla crème anglaise and thicken it with Bird’s, which gives a malty sweetness and comforting flavour. For the topping, we mix fresh cream, mascarpone, cream cheese, crème fraîche and orange zest. For the ‘hundreds-and-thousands’, I was inspired by another childhood memory, of a friend who always had a packet of Butterkist popcorn to hand.”

Recipe taken from Paul’s first cookbook, For The Love Of Food (Pavilion £26), and tested by delicious. Paul’s Padstow restaurant, Paul Ainsworth At No 6, holds a Michelin star and is joined by nearby Med-inspired Caffé Rojano and The Mariners pub in Rock.

Nutrition: Per serving

Calories
798kcals
Fat
6g (25g saturated)
Protein
11g
Carbohydrates
76g (70g sugars)
Fibre
5.2g
Salt
0.6g

Ingredients

For the jelly layer

  • 400g mixed frozen berries
  • 70g caster sugar
  • 200ml white wine
  • 4 gelatine leaves
  • 300g strawberries, hulled and halved
  • 6 sponge fingers, cut into 2.5cm pieces

For the custard

  • 4 medium free-range egg yolks
  • 60g caster sugar
  • 70g Bird’s custard powder
  • 700ml whole milk
  • 100ml double cream
  •  1⁄2 tsp vanilla extract
  • Pinch sea salt flakes (Paul uses Cornish Sea Salt)
  • 2 gelatine leaves

For the topping

  • 175g full-fat cream cheese (Paul uses Philadelphia)
  • 63g icing sugar
  • 63g crème fraîche
  • Finely grated zest 1⁄4 orange
  • 1⁄2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 125ml double cream

For the ‘hundreds and thousands’

  • 30g popcorn kernels
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 10g unsalted butter, chilled and chopped into cubes
  • Pinch sea salt flakes
  • 35g hazelnuts, toasted in a dry pan until fragrant, then halved
  • 25g white chocolate
  • Finely grated zest 1 orange

Specialist kit

  • Trifle bowl; piping bag
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Method

  1. Put the frozen berries, sugar, wine and 350ml water in a heatproof bowl and cover. Set it over a pan of simmering water (ensuring the base of the bowl doesn’t touch the water) and cook for 45 minutes, making sure the water doesn’t evaporate from the pan (top it up if you need to). Strain the mixture through a fine sieve set over a bowl. Whizz the remaining solids in a blender until smooth, then transfer to a piping bag and keep in the fridge.
  2. While the collected liquid is still hot, soak the 4 gelatine leaves in cold water for 2 minutes until jelly-like. Remove from the bowl and squeeze out the excess water. Measure out 500ml of the berry liquid, then stir in the softened gelatine until dissolved. Add the strawberries and leave to cool to room temperature. Once cool, pour the jelly mixture into the trifle bowl. Take the sponge finger pieces and layer them into the strawberry jelly mixture, then put in the fridge to set for at least 2 hours.
  3. To make the custard, put the egg yolks, sugar, custard powder and 50ml of the milk in a mixing bowl and whisk into a paste. Put the remaining milk, the cream and vanilla in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Once boiled, pour half the milk mixture into the bowl with the egg yolk mixture and combine, then return this to the saucepan and heat over a low heat, stirring continuously until you have a beautiful thick, glossy custard. Season with the salt.
  4. Soak the 2 gelatine leaves in cold water for a few minutes, then squeeze out the excess water and stir them into the warm custard until dissolved. Set aside to cool to room temperature, then pour over the set jelly, making sure you have an even layer all over. Cover the bowl and return to the fridge to set for at least 2 hours.
  5. For the topping, take a mixing bowl and whisk together all the ingredients except the double cream. In a separate medium bowl, whisk the double cream until it forms soft peaks. Add the whipped cream to the cream cheese mixture and gently fold in until stiff. Pipe or spoon onto the cold custard layer and put the trifle bowl back in the fridge.
  6. Next, make the ‘hundreds and thousands’. Put the popcorn kernels in a pan covered with a lid (or in a covered bowl in the microwave) and heat until popped. If cooking in a pan, keep them moving so they don’t burn.
  7. Take a small frying pan and melt the sugar over a medium heat to a golden caramel, then remove from the heat and carefully add the butter, piece by piece (it will sputter), stirring continuously until fully mixed in. Add the sea salt, toasted hazelnuts and popcorn, stirring to fully coat the popcorn in the nutty, buttery caramel. Transfer to a tray lined with baking paper, leave to cool, then break into small clusters.
  8. To finish the final layer of your trifle masterpiece, pipe dollops or dots of the reserved berry purée all over the topping, then add the nutty popcorn clusters. Grate over the white chocolate and finish with some orange zest. Stand back and take a bow!

Nutrition

Nutrition: per serving
Calories
798kcals
Fat
6g (25g saturated)
Protein
11g
Carbohydrates
76g (70g sugars)
Fibre
5.2g
Salt
0.6g

delicious. tips

  1. Keep the egg whites to make meringues, bind fritters or meatballs, or use in an omelette. They freeze well too, lightly beaten.

  2. You can make all the elements and add them to the trifle bowl up to a day in advance. Wait until you’re ready to serve before sprinkling over the ‘hundreds and thousands’. The trifle is best eaten on the day it’s made as the popcorn topping will go chewy.

Buy ingredients online

Recipe By:

Paul Ainsworth

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