Irish moss has quickly become one of my favorite ingredients to experiment with. It makes incredibly light melt-in-your-mouth desserts but is also a wonderful thickener/binder in all sorts of recipes, such as dressings, sauces and even burgers!
Join me and Don's sister Sandy as I walk her through the technique I use when working with Irish moss.  
Here's what I do in a nutshell along with a few helpful tips...
First I rinse the moss very well under  running cold  water then place it  in a container of cold water and  massage it briefly  to help remove more  grits and unwanted particles. I  repeat this step 3  or 4 times until the  water stays clear. I then  fill the container with  fresh cold water and  leave it covered in the  fridge. After 24 hours,  the Irish moss is ready  to be used. (Alternatively, you could leave it at room temp for 3 1/2 hours or so.) 
A couple of things I'd like to  stress... It is key that the  water is cold to avoid the moss  losing some of its precious  gelling properties. The moss will keep for  about a week to 10 days in  the fridge in the same soak water  (that too apparently helps  maintain the gelatin.)
A few other tips that I've learned while handling Irish moss...
- It really does help to roughly chop the measured amount of moss before  throwing it in the blender.
- Make sure to blend the moss with some kind of liquid first until it's  completely dissolved before adding other ingredients. I personally prefer to make a gel or a paste by blending Irish moss with water; that way it's ready to be used in any recipe.
- You'll probably have to stop the blender a couple of times in order to  scrape the bits of moss that have shot up to the sides and in the  rubber top.
- It takes quite a bit of blending before the Irish moss 'explodes'  into a gelatin; a process that is activated by the heat generated during blending.
- Once your filling mixture is ready I strongly recommend taking the   extra time to do a consistency test. (Having to scrape your pie filling   out of the crust because it didn't set properly is a real pain in the   butt!) Simply put a small amount of filling in a glass or small bowl and   let it sit in the fridge (or freezer) for half an hour or so. Then run  a  knife through it and see if it comes clean. If it's not firm enough,   throw the tested portion back in the blender container along with the  rest  of the filling and add a couple of tablespoons of melted coconut  oil.  That should do the trick. If you're happy with the consistency,  simply blend the tested portion back with the rest of the mixture  briefly and proceed with the assembly.
- I once read somewhere that Irish moss  based desserts shouldn't be  frozen as it alters the consistency.  Having said that, placing it in the  freezer for half an hour or so for  the purposes of testing or kick  starting the firming process won't  hurt.
Hope this helps with your own Irish moss experiments!
From where do you source your Irish moss?
ReplyDeleteI usually get mine from The Raw Food World.
ReplyDeleteHi! I truly love your website with all your creative ideas and information...
ReplyDeleteI just wondered if you know if irish moss's based deserts such as mousses, of even truffles, last shorter time in fridge... I'm preparing raw goodies to sell for Christmas Time, and don't want my stuffed raw chocolates to mold within a week! Would it be better to use coconut oil/butter etc. to give consistancy (to the cremes and ganache inside chocolates)?
Thank you so much for your help and inspiration!
Blessings
Isabelle,
DeleteSorry about the late replied but somehow Blogger had failed to notify me when you posted your comment. ;-(
Le's see... Yes, Irish moss desserts tend to not last as long - 5 days maybe. Also I read somewhere - in Cafe Gratitude's books?- that it's best to store them in the fridge as opposed to the freezer, as the latter would affect the consistency.
For choccie fillings I would definitely recommend using coconut oil or cacao butter; both work super well.