Jeanne Duval’s menu
The Sweetness of the Islands — The Sugary Pleasure of Late Evening

Coconut Blancmange

OfferingEvocation🍯facile30 min + 4 h setting

A set cream, white and melting, made with coconut milk and cow's milk, sweetened with cane sugar, perfumed with lime zest, and set like a trembling flan. The quintessential Creole dessert, sweet and refreshing.

The Sweetness of the Islands — The Sugary Pleasure of Late Evening

A set cream, white and melting, made with coconut milk and cow's milk, sweetened with cane sugar, perfumed with lime zest, and set like a trembling flan. The quintessential Creole dessert, sweet and refreshing.

Here, taste my little sweet, my child. It's white as milk, but it comes from the Islands: grated coconut that we press, cane sugar, and just the soul of a lime. It was offered to those with a sweet tooth at the end of the meal, cool and trembling under the spoon. A lady does not always admit her weakness — I have never been able to resist that caress.
Jeanne Duval
Ingredients
  • Fresh grated and pressed coconutthe milk of one coconut (flavor and liquid)
  • Milka bowl (creamy base)
  • Cane sugarto taste (sweetness)
  • Isinglass (period gelatin)a little (setting agent)
  • Lime zesta hint (flavoring)
How it was made : Blancmange is an ancient European dessert (almonds, milk, gelling agent) that Creole cuisine reinvented with tropical coconut. In the 19th century, it was set with isinglass or hartshorn. The coconut version became a classic of Antillean desserts.