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| 1 3/4 | teaspoons | gelatin | unflavored |
| 1/2 | cup | lemon juice | well-strained |
| 3/4 | cup | heavy whipping cream | well-chilled |
| 5 | each | egg whites | |
| 3/4 | cup | sugar | |
| Black currant sauce | |||
| 12 | ounces | black currants | frozen |
| 1 | each | lemon | juiced |
| 3/4 | cup | sugar | |
| 1/2 | cup | water | |
Line a 9-inch loaf pan with foil or plastic wrap, being sure that enough wrap is used to cover and overhang all 4 sides of the pan and top.
Sprinkle gelatin over lemon juice in a saucepan and heat until the gelatin is dissolved.
Place in a medium bowl set in a larger bowl of ice. Whip the cream, add the lemon juice, and stir with a rubber spatula until blended.
Let stand over the ice for 10 to 15 minutes, or until the mixture is slightly thickened.
Remove the bowl from the ice. Beat the egg whites with sugar to form soft peaks. Fold 1/4 of the egg whites into the lemon-cream mixture, then fold the mixture carefully into the remaining egg whites.
Spoon into the lined loaf pan. Cover the top with plastic or foil and freeze.
To serve, invert the lemon mousse terrine onto a flat serving platter.
Slice off the ends. Cut into slices 1/4- to 1/2-inch thick. Serve with Black Currant Sauce.
Black Currant Sauce:
Thaw the currants. Place in a blender with the lemon juice, sugar, and water and blend until smooth.
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Whether you call them appetizers, hors d'oeuvres, canapés, amuse-bouches, or amuse-gueules, they are the scrumptious...
This turned out very well. Excellent colourful presentation on the plate, clear and fresh taste, one pan dish and solid Asian flavor. Actually I am in Beijing, China at the moment and just made this using ingredients I was able to find very easily simply walking around the block.