From icy treats to fruity delights, these sunny-day desserts are here to cool you down and sweeten things up.
Fruity ice lollies

Makes 10-12
Ingredients
⅔ cup water or fruit juice of your choice
3 Tbsp sugar (optional)
¼ cup chopped fruit of your choice
1 tsp lemon juice
Fresh mint (optional)
Bubbly or sparkling grape juice, for serving (optional)
Method
- Heat water and sugar in a pot until the sugar has dissolved. Allow to cool. If using fruit juice, skip this step. There’s no need to add sugar as the juice is sweet enough.
- Combine liquid base with chopped fruit and lemon juice. You can leave it chunky if preferred or blend it until smooth.
- Pour into ice lolly moulds of your choice. Add fresh mint, if using.
- Freeze for 1½ hours. Secure the ice cream stick in the lolly as it starts to set.
- Freeze for a further 4-6 hours or overnight.
- An optional celebratory serving suggestion is to serve the ice lollies upside down in a pretty glass topped with some bubbly.
Cook’s tip: We recommend using fruit such as berries, stone fruit, kiwi, mango, pomegranates or pineapple. If you prefer, you can blend the mixture for a smooth consistency or have chunks of fruity bites in the ice lollies.
Recipe & styling: Lichelle May
Photography: Donna Lewis
Smoky rooibos no-churn ice cream

Makes about 2L
Ingredients
10 rooibos tea bags
3 cups whipping cream
2 cans (385g each) condensed milk
¼ cup full-cream milk
Seeds of ½ vanilla pod (or 1 tsp vanilla essence)
For the rooibos syrup
1 cup caster sugar
½ cup hot water
4 rooibos tea bags
Method
- Fold a piece of foil in half and mould it into a small bowl shape. Tear open 6 rooibos teabags and empty the contents into the foil bowl. Place this foil bowl into a medium-small stainless-steel bowl.
- Pour the cream into a separate bowl with the last 4 teabags (intact) and heat for about 1½ minutes until warm. Stir well to encourage the rooibos to infuse.
- Place the two bowls (cream and rooibos) next to each other on a baking tray.
- Cover the entire baking tray with two layers of foil, leaving one end open.
- Light the rooibos on fire with a blowtorch, hovering the flame over the loose-leaf rooibos long enough to ensure it burns properly, creating little embers that produce smoke. Quickly fold the foil closed very tightly, capturing the smoke inside.
- Set aside for 30 minutes to infuse. Do not open.
- Add rooibos syrup ingredients to a pot and bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Boil for another 10 minutes until reduced and thick. Set aside to cool.
- Open the foil chamber and place the smoked cream in the freezer for 10 minutes to chill.
- Discard the burnt rooibos and teabags submerged in the cream.
- Add cream to the bowl of a stand mixer.
- Whisk cream until it reaches stiff peaks, about 45-60 seconds. Take care to not over whip.
- Add the condensed milk, milk and vanilla, whisk for another 15 seconds until completely combined.
- Pour mixture into a 2L freezer-safe container.
- Drizzle cooled rooibos syrup over the ice cream and swirl through using a spatula. Place clingfilm straight onto the surface of the ice cream and freeze overnight or until solid.
- Scoop balls of ice cream onto cones, serve alongside dessert or enjoy on its own, savouring the beauty of the smoke-infused cream.
Recipe & styling: Sjaan Van Der Ploeg
Photography: Zhann Solomons
Rose syrup and raspberry semifreddo

Serves 6-8
Ingredients
4 large egg yolks
1 cup sugar
1½ cups cream, whipped to stiff peaks
1 tub (250g) mascarpone
1 cup fresh raspberries, + extra for decoration
50g pistachios or almonds, shelled and chopped
1 Tbsp rose syrup
Method
- Grease and line a loaf tin with three layers of clingfilm. (Let the clingfilm hang over edges of the tin for easy unmoulding.) Place tin in freezer.
- Place egg yolks and sugar in a large glass bowl over a tight-fitting pot of simmering water.
- Whisk mixture with an electrical whisk on medium speed until thickened and sugar is dissolved, about 10-15 minutes.
- Remove from heat, increase speed to high and whisk for another 3-4 minutes until doubled in volume.
- Fold cream and mascarpone together in a separate bowl.
- Fold cream mixture through the egg mixture, working gently so you don’t knock out the air.
- Spoon mixture into chilled tin.
- Sprinkle over the raspberries, ¾ of the nuts and drizzle with Use a knife to swirl everything through.
- Fold the excess clingfilm over the mixture and freeze overnight to set.
- To serve, unfold the clingfilm from the base, turn over onto a platter and remove the tin. Peel off clingfilm.
- Serve semifreddo sliced and topped with extra berries, nuts and syrup.
Recipe & styling: Sjaan van der Ploeg
Photography: Zhann Solomons
Sunrise panna cotta and jelly

Serves 4-6
Ingredients
For the mango panna cotta
1 Tbsp (12g) gelatine powder 1 mango, peeled and puréed
1 cup (250ml) 100% fresh orange juice
⅓ cup (67g) sugar
¼ cup (60ml) double-cream plain yoghurt
For the berry coulis jelly
1 Tbsp (12g) gelatine powder
2 cup (300g) frozen red berries, thawed
¼ cup (50g) sugar
¼ cup (60ml) water
1 packet (80g) red jelly
225ml boiling hot water
Cherries for serving (optional)
Method
- For the panna cotta, mix gelatine and 3 Tbsp water and set aside for gelatine to sponge.
- Combine remaining panna cotta ingredients, mixing until sugar is dissolved.
- Melt sponged gelatine in the microwave for 15-20 seconds, stirring halfway. Do not let the mixture boil. Stir gelatine into mango
- Pour into a 17cm jelly mould (or a cling-wrap lined bread loaf tin of the same size). Chill the panna cotta until semi-set, about 30-60 minutes.
- For the berry coulis jelly, mix gelatine and 3 Tbsp water and set aside for gelatine to sponge.
- Blitz together the berries, sugar and water to make a coulis.
- Melt sponged gelatine in the microwave for 15-20 seconds, stirring halfway. Do not let the mixture boil. Stir gelatine into 1 cup of berry mixture.
- Pour the berry mixture onto panna cotta layer, then chill until semi-set, about 30-60 minutes.
- Prepare the packet of red jelly with the boiling hot water, then add in the leftover 1⁄2 cup (125ml) berry coulis. Mix well and pour onto the semi-set dessert.
- Chill for 2-3 hours until set, or overnight for best result when unmoulding
- To unmould, place a plate on the jelly mould, flip the jelly mould and plate over and remove the lid on mould. (If you’re using a metal mould, run a hot cloth on the outside of the tin, and using a sharp knife, loosen the edges from top to bottom to release the vacuum. Place on a platter and flip )
- Serve chilled, topped with cherries if you like.
Recipe & styling: Liezl Vermeulen
Photography: Zhann Solomons
Also read: 4 festive dessert recipes
