A Big Little Recipe has the smallest-possible ingredient list and big everything else—flavor, creativity, wow factor. Psst: We don't count water, salt, black pepper, and certain fats (specifically, 1/2 cup or less of olive oil, vegetable oil, and butter), since we're guessing you have those covered. Today, we’re making a frosty treat to chill out with.
For me, ice cream is the post–Memorial Day, pre–Labor Day dessert. Probably because—unlike cake or cookies—it doesn’t require a fire-breathing oven.
But it does require an ice cream machine (1). Which, even if you have, requires remembering to freeze the churning bowl at least 24 hours in advance of a craving. Such is also true for sorbet, sherbet, and frozen yogurt. But not granita.
As cookbook author David Lebovitz defines this Sicilian staple in The Perfect Scoop, “granita is simply shaved ice, made from a lightly sweetened fruit puree or another liquid.” What’s more: “Of all the frozen desserts, granita is the simplest to make.”
This means no fussy technique, no special equipment. If you have a shallow dish (anything from a reusable container to a baking pan) and fork (yep, like what you’d eat a salad with), you’re good to go.
Here’s the cheat sheet: Stir up a liquid base, pour that into a dish, pop it in the freezer, do something else for an hour, rake the slush with a fork, do something else for 30 minutes, rake again, and repeat in 30-minute increments until the granita is frosty as a snow cone.
These options are all A+, but I prefer a deeper, darker, richer granita—made with something you likely already have in your pantry right now: cocoa powder. While natural versus Dutch-process might be a big deal with baked goods, when it comes to recipes with no leavening agents, either works just fine.
Stocked with just cocoa powder and granulated sugar—plus Big Little staples water and salt—you’re halfway to dessert. One that has the chocolatey flavor of an ice cream truck Fudgsicle and flaky-pebbly texture of carnival shaved ice.
You can eat it as-is, or top with something lush. Think: heavy cream, straight from the carton or whisked until pillowy. Or crème fraîche or sour cream or whole-milk Greek yogurt. Or, to keep the whole shebang pantry-friendly, why not a long pour of sweetened condensed milk or grassy olive oil?
Whatever route you take, I hope you’ll add a honking pinch of flaky salt, too.
Your pick of sweetened condensed milk, whipped cream, Greek yogurt, crème fraîche, or extra-virgin olive oil, for topping (or skip altogether)
3/4
cup (63 grams) cocoa powder
2/3
cup (132 grams) granulated sugar
1/4
teaspoon kosher salt
Your pick of sweetened condensed milk, whipped cream, Greek yogurt, crème fraîche, or extra-virgin olive oil, for topping (or skip altogether)
(1) The smart exception to this: no-churn ice cream. If you have yet to experiment, Nigella Lawson’s Genius Recipe is a great place to start.
Put down those long grocery lists. Inspired by the award-winning column, our Big Little Recipes cookbook is minimalism at its best: few ingredients, tons of flavor.
Emma was the food editor at Food52. She created the award-winning column, Big Little Recipes, and turned it into a cookbook in 2021. These days, she's a senior editor at Bon Appétit, leading digital cooking coverage. Say hello on Instagram at @emmalaperruque.
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