Skip to content
American Public Media Donate DONATE
American Public Media Programs
  • NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMS
  • American RadioWorks Award winning documentaries
  • American Routes Exploring American musical genres
  • As It Happens The stories behind current affairs
  • Being Conversations on religion and life
  • Dinner Party Download Win your next dinner party
  • Marketplace Business news for the rest of us
  • Marketplace Money How money makes the world go 'round
  • Marketplace Morning Report 8 minutes you can't afford to miss
  • Marketplace Tech Report A guide to the modern world
  • A Prairie Home Companion Variety show with Garrison Keillor
  • The Splendid Table Public radio's show about food
  • The Story The human side of news and issues
  • The Writer's Almanac Today in history and a poem or two
  • CLASSICAL MUSIC
  • Classical Live The best concert events of the year
  • Composers Datebook Profiles of composers in history
  • Holiday Specials Programs to celebrate the season
  • Performance Today America's classical conversation
  • Pipedreams Celebrating the King of instruments
  • Saint Paul Sunday In-studio music and conversation
  • SymphonyCast The great orchestras in concert
The Splendid Table The show for people who love to eat.
Recipes · Episodes · Where We Eat · Blog · Tips · Stump! · Store · Contribute

Tart Orange Panna Cotta Trifle

Copyright 2010 Lynne Rossetto Kasper

10 minutes prep time; 4 to 24 hours refrigerator time.

Serves 8 to 10.

The trifle needs to be done a day ahead.

For what it delivers, panna cotta deserves culinary sainthood. Ten minutes of your time and several hours in the fridge delivers a dessert that's made more than one cook's (and non-cook's) reputation. And not many sweets are this free-spirited.

This was improvised last Easter when my free Saturday night to bake Easter dessert was sidelined by a last minute party. So improvisation took over.

Bread and jam trifle came to mind, but panna cotta was so much easier. Spoon store-bought marmalade onto sponge cake slices and layered them with the gelled cream was the plan. When the marmalade tasted tooth achingly, some lemon juice got stirred in. The mix became more a sauce than a jam and deliciously tart/sweet, just what was needed to cut the richness of the panna cotta.

Tuck that one away for when you need a fast sauce, or a glaze on some ribs.

Cook to Cook: Use organic cream if possible, and check that the sour cream contains only cream and culture, no other additives.

Categories:
  • Dessert
  • Easter
  • Popular
  • Spring
Print
Ingredients
    Panna Cotta:
  • 1/4 cup cold water
  • 4-1/2 teaspoons unflavored gelatin
  • 4 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
  • 3/4 cup sugar, or more to taste
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 -1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoon of fine-grated orange zest
  • 1 -1/2 cups sour cream
    For assembling the trifle:
  • 1 8" x 4" loaf of sponge cake, or one 8 to 10- inch round sponge cake
  • 1-1/2 cups orange marmalade
  • 1/3 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice, or to taste
Similar Recipes
  • Chocolate Souffle with Rum Sauce
  • Bread and Butter Pudding
  • Crunchy Sesame Chicken Wings
  • Breakfast Barley

Latest Recipes

  • Mussels in Spicy Tomato Sauce
  • Quark
  • Port Wine Peaches in Vanilla Cream
  • Old-Time Potato Salad
  • Asparagus with Green Herbs
  •  

Most Popular Recipes

  • Tomatoes Stuffed with Rice, Pine Nuts, and Fresh Oregano
  • Crunchy Sesame Chicken Wings
  • Suquet de Rape
  • Grilled Turkey Burgers with Tomato-Mango Chutney
  • Shrimp and Mango Summer Rolls
Instructions

1. Make the panna cotta in two equal batches. For each one have the cold water in a small cup, and sprinkle the gelatin over it. Let it stand 5 minutes. Meanwhile, in a 3-quart saucepan over medium-high heat, stir together half the cream with half the sugar, salt, vanilla, and orange zest. Do not let it boil. Stir in the gelatin until thoroughly dissolved. Take the cream off the heat and cool about 5 minutes.

2. Put half the sour cream in a medium bowl. Gently whisk in the warm cream a little at a time until it is smooth. Taste the mixture for sweetness, it may need another teaspoon of sugar. Turn the panna cotta into a deep glass serving bowl. Cover, and chill 3 hours.

3. Cut the sponge cake into 1/2-inch thick pieces that are about 3 by 3-inches. Blend the marmalade with the lemon juice and taste for tartness. Spoon it over the cake slices.

4. Once the panna cotta is firmed up in the refrigerator, top it with half the sponge slices. Make the second batch of panna cotta with the remaining ingredients, pour it over the first and top it with the remaining sponge slices. Don't worry if they sink down a bit. Chill overnight. Serve cool spooned into small bowls.

Sponsor Become a sponsor
  • Radio Stations
  • Newsletters
  • Podcast
  • RSS Feeds
  • Contact Us
Sponsor Become a sponsor
The Splendid Table Store

About The Show

Lynne Rossetto Kasper, Host

In 1994, acclaimed food writer and cooking teacher Lynne Rossetto Kasper was receiving accolades for her debut book, The Splendid Table, which at that time was the only book to have won both the James Beard and Julia Child Cookbook of the Year awards. Among the many people enchanted by the book was producer and foodie Sally Swift, who thought the time could be right for a radio program on food.

American Public Media © |   Terms and Conditions   |   Privacy Policy
Programs
American RadioWorks
American Routes
Composers Datebook
Future Tense
Marketplace
Marketplace Money
Performance Today
Pipedreams
A Prairie Home Companion
Saint Paul Sunday
Sound Opinions
Speaking of Faith
The Splendid Table
The Story
SymphonyCast
The Writer's Almanac
More…
Support American Public Media

American Public Media's online services are supported by users like you. Contribute now…

More from American Public Media
APM Podcasts/RSS Feeds
APM Newsletters
iTunes U
Public Radio Tuner
APM Careers
About APM