How to Make Coffee Caviar?
Spherification has been a thing in fine dining for years, largely down to the brilliant minds at elBulli, but now mere mortals are getting in on the act, by creating their own coffee caviar.
Photo of Food & Wine Magazine
Coffee
caviar has been popping up on Instagram, largely as a decoration for desserts.
The process of spherification is actually fairly simple: you add a small amount
of sodium alginate to the liquid you wish to manipulate and then drop it into
water containing a similarly small amount of calcium chloride. The resulting
chemical reaction creates a membrane around the drops of liquid, giving you
amazing caviar-like spheres that burst in the mouth.
The
video below from molecularrecipes.com shows you exactly how to do it. For sure,
this might take a few goes to get right, but imagine how impressed everyone
will be when you serve these little liquid centred flavour bombs to them – not
just coffee, you could use this for anything.
This
piece of kit called the Imperial Sphericator, is also another great way to get
started with spherification at home.
Take
a look at how people have been using coffee caviar to liven up desserts and
savoury dishes below. Also, further down is a video from ChefSteps showing you
how to make chocolate caviar. The possibilities, seemingly, are endless.
By FDL