This recipe proves two things. One: Candied flowers can last. Two: Size matters.
As to the first point, I sugared these violets in April. The last of the batch I created for a Canadian Gardening article, they remained perfect, crisp and crystallized in their tiny plastic container. For 3 months. Take that dratted summer humidity!
As to the second point? When I made this a sublime dish a few years ago, my tiny kitchen quickly turned the situation ridiculous. Meringues cooled in the dining room while dirty dishes circled in a holding pattern over the living room coffee table. With no counter space left I whipped the cream crouching on the floor as my hand mixer splattered dairy product on the walls. Upon presenting the dessert, I’m told I punctuated the birthday greetings with “Never Again” instead of heartfelt exclamation marks. “Happy Birthday, Dad Never Again Hope you like the dessert Never Again May all your birthday wishes come true Never Again.”
But this is what Mom wanted for her birthday dessert. Since I can refuse her nothing, this is what I made – in my newly renovated kitchen with its huge sink, ample counter space, spiffy stand mixer, handy albeit apartment-sized dish washer and full-sized oven that can take two baking sheets at once. Whip, wash, whisk, cook, cool, fold and assemble. Piece of cake. In fact, it went together so easily I wonder what my problem had been.
Looking back at pre-reno photos …. oh, yes. I remember now.
So, if you’ve got a decent-sized kitchen and plan your attack, this recipe is worth every calorie. The best part? You can make it up to a week ahead of time.
And Happy Birthday, Mom. I’d make this again for you any time.
Do you have a favourite pain-in-the-pan dish? What is it and who do you make it for?
Frozen Lemon Pavolva
Serves 12
This recipe is a no-eggs-wasted adaptation of a recipe from Canadian Living Desserts (Random House, 1992).
Meringues
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 2 tbsp cornstarch
- zest of 1 lemon
- 6 egg whites
- 1 tsp vanilla
- Preheat oven to 300F.
- Trace four 8-inch circles on parchment paper. You should get two circles per sheet. Place parchment on baking sheets.
- Combine half the sugar with the cornstarch and lemon zest. Mix well and set aside.
- Separate the eggs, reserving the yolks for the filling.
- In a large bowl, beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Continue beating while adding sugar 1 to 2 tablespoons at a time. Beat until meringue is stiff. Add vanilla, then fold in remaining sugar mixture.
- Distribute the meringue evenly amongst the four circles. Gently spread the meringue to fill the circles, being careful not to go past the edges and ensuring the tops stay as smooth as possible.
- Bake for 1 hour or until the meringues are dry and light gold.
- Cool the meringues and then assemble immediately or store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days.
Filling
- 1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
- 1/3 cup butter
- grated zest of 2 lemons
- 1 cup fresh lemon juice (do not use bottled!)
- 6 egg yolks
- 1 1/2 cups whipping cream
- Place sugar, butter, zest and juice in a saucepan and heat over medium-high until sugar dissolves.
- In a bowl, whisk the yolks. In a slow, steady stream, pour the lemon mixture into the yolks, whisking constantly.
- Transfer the lemon mixture to the sauce pan and cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Do not boil.
- Pour the lemon mixture into a bowl, place plastic wrap directly on the surface and chill until at least room temperature. The mixture can be chilled for up to 1 day.
- When you’re ready to assemble the pavlova, whip the cream and fold into the lemon mixture.
Assembly
- Crumble one of the meringues. Set aside for garnish.
- Place one meringue in a 9-inch spring form pan. Pour one third of the lemon mixture over the meringue.
- Repeat the layers with the remaining meringues, ending with the filling on top.
- Sprinkle with the crumbled meringue.
- Cover and freeze for 8 hours. (Can be kept frozen for up to 1 week.)
- Let soften in the refrigerator for 45 minutes to an hour before serving.







{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }
I need to try this. First, I need to declutter my kitchen counters. Dynamite might work…
My pain-in-the-pan dessert-chocolate truffles. I used to make handmade and dipped chocolate truffles. It took 3 days. First the ganache, which you chilled, but not too much. Then you piped them into small lumps. And chilled them…but not too much. Then you dipped your hands and the lumps into icing sugar and coaxed them into balls, but you had to work fast so they didn’t melt. And then you chilled them. I used to freeze them.
Then you melt the chocolate coating, dip each truffle one at a time in the coating, and then pipe white chocolate decorations on them. And them you chill them again, safe in the knowledge that by now you are so sick of dealing with them, that even a confirmed chocoholic will ignore them.
I also used to make chocolate dipped cherries. Drain the maraschino cherries (with stems) on paper towel, remembering to put a plate under the paper towel so you don’t stain the counter. (learned THAT one the hard way) Pat them dry and wrap them in fondant. chill. Melt coating and dip them in chocolate. 2 day process.
I don’t make either one any more, and Christmas still comes.
@Lisa MacColl, oh, truffles. Been there, piped that. In fact, Andrew and I had a croquembouche of chocolate truffles in lieu of a wedding cake ( http://christiescorner.com/2006/10/05/anniversary-truffles/) And you’re right, “but not too much” is a recurring theme with these.
I used to make them every Christmas and gave up. Wonder if I should resume now that the kitchen counter space can support more than a postage stamp.
For Heavens Sake Of Course You Should Keep Making Them!!! As Andrew would say, “talking about giving up making truffles is just crazy talk”. Also please make more Frozen Lemon Pavlova. I love them both!!
Love from Guess Who.
@Robin Smart, okay. Hint taken.
Sounds fantastic, m’dear. Cheers from New Zealand, the home of the Pavlova.
@Frugal Kiwi, strangely, I never saw pavlova on the menu when I was in New Zealand. No worries, the food there was fantastic. I spent a good five weeks there and never had a bad meal.
I just look at your before and after pictures of your kitchen. Looks really good. I love your new cuisine. I have to say that I have been missing cooking in a real kitchen from April to July since we were camping all over the States. In my trailer I did not have much space to cook. But we survived. I’ve never had Pavolva before. That must be a refreshing dessert for the summer.
@Helene, I admire anyone who can cook in a trailer. Kudos to you. Especially in the heat of summer.
This is a very refreshing summer dessert but I think my father wouldn’t mind even if I served it in the dead of winter. Lemon is his favourite.
Safe travels and hope you enjoy your “real kitchen” upon your return.
I have made this twice now and it’s fantastic… it’s always a huge crowd pleaser. The most recent time I made it I made this slight tweak which to me resulted in a prettier looking cake…
When baking, the meringues expanded past 8″, so before assembling the layers I took the bottom of the cake pan I had used to trace the 8″ circles and placed it over the meringue, then used a sharp knife to cut excess off from around the edges. This resulted in a perfectly circular 8″ meringue. I centered these in the 9″ springform which meant when I poured the mousse over it ran over the edges and when I removed the springform none of the meringue circles showed through the edges… it looked like a completely frosted cake… no-one who saw it was able to guess what was inside until they got their piece!
Thanks for this awesome recipe!
@Ben Goodger, what a great idea. I bet your pavlova was stunning. Thanks so much for taking the time to share your new-found technique. I wish I could have seen the look of surprise when your guests realized it wasn’t cake but a meringue!
Hello
I would love to make this pavlova,
one question is it necessary to put butter in the filling?
Myra
Good question. I’ve never made it without the butter and my gut response is you need it to keep the custard smooth.
Is there a specific reason you want to omit the butter? If I understood your motivation, I might be able to suggest an alternative.
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