An Easy Old-Fashioned Creamy Dessert: Honey Lilac Posset (2024)

“Be cheerful knight: thou shalt eat a posset tonight at my house.” William Shakespeare, Hamlet

Dating back to the middle ages, the posset is making a comeback. Likea custardcrossed with apudding,it’s perfect whenyou want to whip up a special dessert with minimal effort. It’s made with three ingredients, honey, lilac-infused cream and lemon juice – that’s it. These are gently boiled together and chilled overnight. Thereare no egg yolks, gelatin, flour, or cornstarch.It relies on the lemon juice to thicken and set – and the result is simply divine.

An Easy Old-Fashioned Creamy Dessert: Honey Lilac Posset (1)

You’ll need to begin by making violet-infused cream. This means removing all the blossoms from their tiny stems. I find that if you include any of the greenery, it interferes with the floral flavour – making it a bit vegetal tasting. And we want just the pure sweet fragrance of lilac in a posset! Warm some cream (just above room temperature) and then soak the blossoms in cream, allowing to cool and infuse overnight, If in a rush gently warm on in a saucepan on lowest heat. Violet’s aromatic oils are compromised by cooking so be careful!

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And if lilac isn’t wonderful enough, try infusing your posset with spring flowers like wild rose or elderflower. But whatever floral you use, remember you need to keep the lemon, it acidifies the cream, causing the casein proteins in the cream to set.

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Today’s posset is very different from the one often referred to by Shakespeare, a drink made from curdled milk, sugar, alcohol and sack, (a fortified wine or sweet ale similar to sherry). I like this 1596 recipe from The Good Housewife’s JewelTake a pint of thick cream, and season it with sugar and ginger, and rose water. So stir it as you would then have it make it lukewarm in a dish on a chafing dish and coals. And after put it into a silver piece or a bowl, and so serve it to the board.”

Bythe 18th century, possets are made from milk but thickened with egg yolks (like custard) or bread (like a trifle). But the modern posset recipes now making the rounds, are more like basic puddings (no, not the Jello). And they’re often served slathered on scones or with shortbread biscuits.

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Puddings today are not thought to be good for the health, but possets certainly were. Used as a general “restorative” to fortify the body, or as a curative to banish colds and illness, possets were a delicious way to make the medicine go down. A 19th-century recipe mentions a black pepper flavoured posset that will ‘promote perspiration’ in order to sweat out a fever. Flowers, of course, bring their own healing properties, elderflower and rose for example are both known for their anti-inflammatory constituents.

Possets were often served at weddings and used in toasts at all levels of society. Like, let’s say a Rose Posset made with rose brandy and yarrow infused honey (good for ensuring love, fidelity and marital bliss).

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Sometimes a wedding ring was thrown in the posset pot and the person who found it was next to head to the altar. You would use a spoon to eat the top layers and then drink the wine through the spout in the cup. With an alcoholic base at bottom and creamy layer on top, it actually sounds quite delicious. Needless to say I’ll be experimenting with a boozy wedding-inspired posset shortly.

So if you love the scent of lilacs, you’ll be enchanted by this Lilac Honey Posset. But if love roses, well that’s heavenly too. I’m moving on to lavender, whose buds are plumping and readying for harvest. But whatever floral you choose, I’m willing to bet you’ll soon find yourself (like us!) enthralled with the old-fashioned charm of the posset.

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Makes about 6 portions.

INGREDIENTS

  • 4 cups cream (heavy or regular whipping cream both work)
  • ½ cup honey
  • ⅓ cup lemon juice
  • 2 cups fresh lilac blossoms (be sure to remove all stems, especially from the Lilac & Elderflower…and if you’re using lavender, you’ll need just half a cup!)
  • wee pinch of salt & cardamom (if you’re so inclined)

INSTRUCTIONS

Night Before

  • Remove all stems from half of your lilac blossoms. Warm some cream (just above room temperature) and then soak the blossoms in cream, allowing them to cool and infuse overnight. If in a rush gently warm on in a saucepan on the lowest heat or warm on a warming burner. No longer than an hour. Remove from heat.
  • Strain lilacs from cream before using.

Next Day

  • Remove the rest of the petals of the rest of your blossoms. (You could do all the petals at once but I like to keep the blossoms as fresh as possible.)
  • Mix honey and cream together, heat to a gentle boil over medium-high heat. Stir to make sure honey and cream are well combined. You do not want a roiling boil – just a few light bubbles. A heavy boil will spoil the cream!
  • Reduce to a simmer for 3 minutes, and keep stirring! Then add lemon juice and stir some more.
  • Remove from heat, let cool slightly, and then mix in the other half of your blossoms. Allow to infuse for ten minutes.
  • Strain off flowers and pour your cream mixture into small jars or ramekins.
  • Cover tightly and chill overnight (or at least 4 hours).

Some say you can stick in the freezer for 30-40 minutes (if you’re in rush to sample your just desserts) but I generally have found they won’t decently set unless left for 24 hrs.

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For more lilac magic check out this video!

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An Easy Old-Fashioned Creamy Dessert: Honey Lilac Posset (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between posset and panna cotta? ›

Both posset and panna cotta are cream-based desserts, but there is a key difference between the two. Whereas panna cotta uses gelatin to thicken and set, posset relies entirely on the citric acid found in lemon juice and other citrus fruits.

What is the history of the posset? ›

As early as the 15th century, posset was a ubiquitous part of British foodways—in fact, it was mentioned in three of Shakespeare's plays. Like other popular dishes across history, no singular recipe for posset exists. Nevertheless, possets typically took two primary forms.

What is the US equivalent to double cream? ›

The British use double cream in recipes the way we use heavy cream or whipping cream here in the US, but they also allow it to accompany dessert the way we might use ice cream.

How to make posset thicker? ›

Heavy whipping cream: Use a cream that's 35% milk fat. This will ensure that the posset will set into a thick, rich, smooth and creamy texture.

What is a bridal posset? ›

Due to its reputation as an aphrodisiac, some couples received posset on their wedding night. Although varying posset recipes abound, the most common formula called for milk or heavy cream, sugar, spices such as cinnamon and nutmeg, and a significant quantity of sack, a sweet fortified wine.

Where does the name posset come from? ›

The OED traces the word to the 15th century: various Latin vocabularies translate balducta, bedulta, or casius as "poshet", "poshoote", "possyt", or "possot". Russell's Boke of Nurture (c. 1460) lists various dishes and ingredients that "close a mannes stomak", including "þe possate".

What is a posset mill? ›

• Posset mill: Hot beverage of boiled. milk, wine or ale (which curdles the milk), and sometimes spices such as nutmeg or cinnamon. The drink was often used as a cold remedy or a sleep aide.

How would you describe a posset? ›

Posset is a drink similar to our modern eggnog. It is made by pouring heated and spiced cream over a warm mixture of eggs, sugar, and alcohol. The result is a rich custard full of calories and fat that can sometimes curdle.

What is posset made of? ›

In 16th-century and later sources, possets are generally made from lemon or other citrus juice, cream and sugar. Eggs are often added. Some recipes used breadcrumbs to thicken the beverage. "Posset sets" for mixing and serving possets were popular gifts, and valuable ones (often made of silver) were heirlooms.

What is another name for panna cotta? ›

Panna cotta is sometimes called a custard, but true custard is thickened with egg yolks, not gelatin. A lighter version substitutes cream with Greek yogurt.

What does panna cotta literally mean? ›

Panna cotta means “cooked cream” in Italy, and that's essentially what the base is: heated heavy cream (often with a little half-and-half or whole milk) set with powdered gelatin and flavored with vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste.

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