Light Lemon Mousse Terrine
Submitted by medrecords2001
Frozen lemon mousse terrine with whipped cream, beaten egg whites, and gelatin, sliced and served with a vibrant black currant sauce. Light, elegant, and make-ahead friendly.
YIELD
10 servingsPREP
25 minCOOK
15 minREADY
40 minThis frozen lemon mousse terrine is the kind of dessert you make a day ahead and slice to order. Whipped cream folded with beaten egg whites and lemon juice creates an airy, cloud-light mousse that freezes into clean, elegant slices.
The gelatin dissolved in lemon juice is the structural backbone. Set the bowl over ice and stir until the mixture thickens slightly before folding in the egg whites. If you skip the ice bath step and fold too early, the gelatin stays liquid and sinks to the bottom instead of holding the mousse in suspension.
Fold a quarter of the egg whites in first to lighten the lemon-cream base, then gently fold that mixture into the remaining whites. This two-stage folding preserves as much air as possible, which is what gives each slice that mousse-like texture rather than a dense frozen block.
The black currant sauce is what makes this special. Blended frozen currants with lemon juice, sugar, and water create a deep purple, tart-sweet sauce that contrasts sharply with the pale, creamy terrine.
Kitchen Tips
- Line the loaf pan with enough plastic wrap to overhang all sides generously. This makes unmolding effortless.
- Beat egg whites to soft peaks only, not stiff. Over-beaten whites are grainy and don’t fold smoothly.
- Slice with a knife dipped in hot water for clean cuts through the frozen mousse.
- Let slices sit at room temperature for 2 to 3 minutes before serving. Slightly softened mousse has better flavor and texture than rock-solid frozen.
Variations
- Swap black currant sauce for raspberry coulis or passion fruit sauce.
- Add a teaspoon of lemon zest to the mousse for a more intense citrus punch.
- Layer thin slices of fresh berries between mousse layers before freezing.
Ingredients
Directions
Line a 9-inch loaf pan with foil or plastic wrap, being sure that enough wrap is used to cover and overhang all 4 sides of the pan and top.
Sprinkle gelatin over lemon juice in a saucepan and heat until the gelatin is dissolved.
Place in a medium bowl set in a larger bowl of ice. Whip the cream, add the lemon juice, and stir with a rubber spatula until blended.
Let stand over the ice for 10 to 15 minutes, or until the mixture is slightly thickened.
Remove the bowl from the ice. Beat the egg whites with sugar to form soft peaks. Fold ¼ of the egg whites into the lemon-cream mixture, then fold the mixture carefully into the remaining egg whites.
Spoon into the lined loaf pan. Cover the top with plastic or foil and freeze.
To serve, invert the lemon mousse terrine onto a flat serving platter.
Slice off the ends. Cut into slices ¼ to ½-inch thick. Serve with Black Currant Sauce.
Black Currant Sauce:
Thaw the currants. Place in a blender with the lemon juice, sugar, and water and blend until smooth.
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