Peach Whiskey Sour & Cherry Cosmopolitan Sorbets
Two new cocktail-inspired sorbets join the heritage collection
Welcome
I'm Jennifer, a culinary storyteller dedicated to documenting disappearing food cultures and preserving family heritage through recipes. From my California kitchen, I revive heritage dishes from Midwest family farms, uncover forgotten family treasures, and thoughtfully adapt them for today’s kitchens while honoring their original spirit.
Each week, I bring you heritage food stories complete with context: the recipe itself, its cultural significance, family history, modern adaptations, and how these traditions continue to thrive today. I’m preserving food stories before they are lost forever, one family recipe at a time.
Two NEW Sorbets Join My Heritage Collection
I'm excited to add two new sorbets to my ever-growing collection of ice creams, sherbets, and sorbets, bringing the total to eight homemade frozen treats that celebrate family tradition and summer joy.
This frozen dessert journey began last year when I decided to recreate my great-grandmother Helen Carnes' apricot sherbet from her handwritten recipe book. What started as a simple, nostalgic experiment became something much more meaningful after I discovered Clara Baker's (my great-aunt Mary Lou's) strawberry honey ice cream recipe — this one typed up on a modern card, suggesting it was a favorite passed down and updated over the years. But the real treasure trove revelation came when I found two more handwritten recipe cards, probably Clara's as well, for lemon and peach ice creams. Four heirloom recipes total, each one a window into our family's love affair with homemade frozen treats.
Since uncovering these four original family recipes, I've been inspired to create two additional frozen treats, bringing the total to eight. Each recipe connects me to the women who came before me — their kitchens, their summers, and the joy they found in creating something special for the people they loved. There's something particularly magical about the mix of Helen's carefully scripted recipe in her recipe book and Clara's handwritten cards, each telling the story of how these treats were cherished enough to be carefully preserved.
Next week, I'm planning to revisit Helen's original apricot sherbet with fresh eyes and a deeper understanding of both her techniques and her era. When I first recreated it last year, the instructions were a little confusing, typical of vintage recipes. I've learned to read between the lines of old family recipes, so I’m pretty sure I can streamline the process and perhaps add some modern touches. I'm thinking ginger for warmth, fresh pineapple for tropical sweetness, strawberries for summer brightness, or toasted almonds for richness. What combination sounds most appealing to you?
This is precisely why we make ice cream, isn't it? For the pure joy it brings us in the making and the even greater joy it creates when we share it with the people we love. Watching my nephew, now 13, light up over a scoop of homemade ice cream reminds me that some traditions are worth preserving, and that time really does fly by in the sweetest way possible.
The Frozen Treat Line Up






New Recipes
Peach Whiskey Sour Sorbet
Inspired by my Lemon Lavender Whiskey Sour from May's Pairings and Pours, this sorbet captures the essence of the classic cocktail—whiskey, lemon juice, and simple syrup—while adding a sweet, summery twist with fresh peaches and nectarines. The result is a sophisticated frozen treat that's perfect for entertaining or treating yourself to something special.
Serves: 8
Prep Time: 20 minutes (plus 4+ hours chilling) | Churn Time: 10-15 minutes
Ingredients
3 cups fresh peaches and nectarines (about 4 peaches and 2 nectarines)
1/4 cup honey
1/3 cup water
1/3 cup Maker’s Mark Bourbon
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice (generous measurement)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Pinch of salt
1 clean, dry egg (for density testing)
Garnish with a maraschino cherry
Directions
Pit and peel the peaches and nectarines (peeling is optional, leaving the skin on adds color). Roughly chop the fruit and add to a blender along with the honey, water, bourbon, lemon juice, vanilla extract, and salt. Blend until smooth and well incorporated.
Drop a clean, dry egg into the mixture. If it sinks completely, add more sugar or honey. If the egg floats with a nickel-sized circle above the surface, your mixture has the proper density for churning.
Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or preferably overnight.
Pour the chilled mixture into your ice cream maker and churn according to the manufacturer's instructions, typically 10-15 minutes, until it reaches a soft-serve consistency.
Transfer to airtight, freezer-safe containers. Serve immediately for a soft texture, or freeze for 2-4 hours for a firmer scoop.
Scoop into chilled bowls or glasses, and garnish with a maraschino cherry for a classic cocktail presentation.


Notes
Fruit ripeness matters: Use ripe but not overripe fruit for the best balance of sweetness and flavor.
Alcohol content: The bourbon prevents the sorbet from freezing completely solid, giving it a creamy, scoopable texture
Storage: Sorbet is best enjoyed within 2-3 days, but can be stored for up to 1 week in the freezer
No ice cream maker? Pour the mixture into a shallow dish and freeze, stirring every 30 minutes for the first 3 hours.
Adult treat: This sorbet contains alcohol and is intended for adults only
Cherry Cosmopolitan Sorbet
Inspired by the success of my Peach Whiskey Sour Sorbet, I wanted to create another cocktail-inspired frozen treat. As a longtime Cosmopolitan fan (thank you, Sex and the City), and with cherries at their peak juiciness this time of year, a Cherry Cosmo Sorbet felt like the perfect summer indulgence. This sophisticated sorbet captures all the tart-sweet essence of the classic cocktail in frozen form.
Serves: 8
Prep Time: 20 minutes (plus 4+ hours chilling) | Churn Time: 10-15 minutes
Ingredients
3 cups fresh cherries, pitted
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon floral honey
1/3 cup water
1/3 cup Vodka
2 teaspoons Grand Marnier
1/3 cup fresh lime juice
Pinch of salt
1 clean, dry egg (for density testing)
Garnish with a fresh cherry or lime twist
Directions
Pit the fresh cherries and slice them in half. Add to a blender along with the sugar, honey, water, vodka, Grand Marnier, lime juice, and salt. Blend until smooth and well incorporated.
Drop a clean, dry egg into the mixture. If it sinks completely, add more sugar or honey. If the egg floats with a nickel-sized circle above the surface, your mixture has the proper density for churning.
Cover and refrigerate the mixture for at least 4 hours, or preferably overnight.
Pour the chilled mixture into your ice cream maker and churn according to the manufacturer's instructions, typically 10-15 minutes, until it reaches a soft-serve consistency.
Transfer to airtight, freezer-safe containers. Serve immediately for a soft texture, or freeze for 2-4 hours for a firmer scoop.
Scoop into chilled bowls or martini glasses for an elegant presentation. Garnish with a fresh cherry or lime twist.


Notes
For ultra-smooth texture: Push the cherry mixture through a fine-mesh sieve before adding the alcohol, pressing the solids with the back of a spoon to remove any remaining pieces.
Alcohol benefits: The vodka and Grand Marnier prevent the sorbet from freezing completely solid, creating a creamy, scoopable texture.
Storage: Best enjoyed within 2-3 days, but can be stored in the freezer for up to 1 week
No ice cream maker? Pour the mixture into a shallow dish and freeze, stirring vigorously every 30 minutes for the first 3 hours to break up ice crystals.
Adult treat: Contains alcohol and is intended for adults only
Density Test Example
The density test can be tricky to judge. Still, the photo above of the Cherry Cosmopolitan Sorbet shows the ideal result — the egg floating with a small circle about the size of a nickel visible above the surface. It indicates the sugar concentration is just right.
Here's how to read the test:
Perfect density: A small area the size of a nickel or quarter is visible above the surface
Too watery: If the egg sinks, add more sugar or honey
Too concentrated: If a large portion of the egg floats above the surface, add more liquid (water, fruit purée, or additional liquids)
In the video below, you can see the egg floating with a bit more surface area visible than ideal. While I wasn't far off, this adjustment makes all the difference. For the Peach Whiskey Sour Sorbet, I increased the original 1/4 cup of liquids (water, bourbon, and lemon juice) to 1/3 cup to achieve the proper balance shown in the Cherry Cosmo photo. This small change ensures the sorbet churns correctly and develops that perfect creamy texture we're after.
Share Your Family Table
Do you have a family recipe with a story to tell? Share it with me, and together we can preserve your culinary heritage.
Next Week
Helen's Apricot Sherbet, from farm frugality to today's kitchen (with a much easier method).
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It is so much fun to try all these wonderful dishes that Jen is continuing to explore add on and develop from old recipes from our childhood and before. They all are very tasty and I enjoy being the sampler. You all should try them. It will make your summer at much more eating experience
Girl, you had me at Cosmo! 🍸 Both of these sound fabulous!!! I have never seen this egg test for density and it is brilliant. Going to use this hack for sure.