
600ml/20fl oz single cream
150ml/5fl oz milk
150g/5oz caster sugar
2 cassia leaves
15g/½oz cassia bark
10g/⅓oz cracked green cardamom pods
13 English breakfast tea bags
2 gelatine leaves, soaked in a bowl of water
125g/4½oz icing sugar
125g/4½oz plain flour
3 free-range egg whites
80g/3oz soft unsalted butter
5 tbsp ground pistachios
2kg/4lb 8oz coconut purée
300g/10½oz caster sugar, plus more if necessary
1 lime, juice only
10 mint leaves
6 tbsp sugar
1-2 tbsp citric acid
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
2 punnets strawberries, hulled
2 tbsp caster sugar
24 filo pastry sheets, each cut to 6cm x 25cm /2½in x 10in
50g/2oz melted butter
icing sugar, for sprinkling
150ml/5fl oz ghee, for frying
600ml/20fl oz natural yoghurt, plus extra if needed
100ml/3½fl oz double cream
½ tbsp icing sugar
generous pinch ground green cardamom
1 ripe mango
50ml/2fl oz orange juice
1 tbsp sugar
squeeze lemon juice
For the chai panna cotta, boil the cream, milk, sugar and spices for four minutes in a large pan. Add the tea bags and simmer for 2-3 minutes, stirring regularly. Strain the milk into a mixing bowl. Squeeze the soaked gelatine leaves and whisk them into the milk, ensuring that the gelatine is fully dissolved. Pour the mixture into 5cm/2in diameter moulds and leave to set in the fridge for three hours.
For the pistachio tuille, preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4.
Make a stencil by cutting the desired shape out of an ice cream tub lid with kitchen scissors, preferably leaving a tear-drop shaped stencil, but you can make any shape you like.
Mix all the pistachio tuille ingredients together in a bowl, except the pistachios.
Place your stencil onto a silicon mat and spread the paste over the top with a spatula. Repeat until you have as many tuilles as desired. Sprinkle the shapes with the ground pistachios and place into the oven for five minutes, or until golden-brown.
For the coconut and lime sorbet, put the coconut purée, sugar and lime juice into a food processor and blend until very smooth. Taste and adjust the sweetness by adding more sugar if required.
Pour the mixture into an ice cream maker and process for about 15-20 minutes (or longer depending on the machine) until churned. Place into the freezer until ready to use.
For the mint sherbet, blend together the sherbet ingredients in a food processor and set aside.
For the strawberry samosa, cut the strawberries into slices, place into colander set over a plate and sprinkle them with the sugar. Set aside in the fridge for four hours.
Spread out a sheet of filo pastry, brush with the melted butter and sprinkle with icing sugar, place another sheet on top and also brush with butter and dust with icing sugar.
Place a small amount of the strawberries on one end of the strip, fold one corner of the pastry over the mixture so that it forms a triangle, then fold the remaining pastry over the top to continue the triangle pattern. Repeat until all of the pastry has been folded and you have a triangle-shaped samosa.
Heat the ghee in a frying pan and shallow fry the samosas until golden-brown and crisp.
For the mango shrikhand, pour the yoghurt into a cheesecloth and leave it to hang from your kitchen tap over the sink to allow the excess whey to drip from it. Leave for 2-3 hours - the longer the yoghurt is left, the thicker it will be. Turn it out into a clean container and keep in the refrigerator.
Whisk the cream in a bowl until stiff peaks form when the whisk is removed from the bowl. Mix the cream, five tablespoons of the hung yoghurt, the icing sugar and cardamom together - if the mixture is too stiff, stir in a little more yoghurt.
For the mango coulis, peel and stone the mango and then blend it in a food processor with the orange juice, sugar and lemon juice and then pass through a fine sieve. Layer the yoghurt mixture and mango coulis in small glasses.
Serve the samosas with the mint sherbet on the side for dipping along with the chai panna cotta, pistachio tuille and shrikhand on a platter and allow guests to pick and choose what they like.
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