The Trendiest Dessert of Summer 2023 Is Tiramisu (but Not in the Way You Think)

tiramisu food trend: berry tiramisu
Photo: Liz Andrew/Styling: Erin McDowell

Vintage cakesmay scratch a certain itch, but the #FoodTok trend we’re currently most excited about is atouchmore effortless and attainable. We’re calling it now: Summer 2023’s trendiest dessert is tiramisu…and it goes way beyond the traditional coffee and chocolate flavors you know. Here’s where the treat is heading, and how you can get your own slice.

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Tiramisu Is Trending? But This Dessert Isn’t New…

True, the Italian confection has been around since at least the 1960s, perThe Telegraph, but the latest iterations are far from traditional. The original tiramisu is a layered dessert that merges trifle andicebox cake: It contains sweet ladyfinger biscuits dipped in coffee (and often alcohol), layered with a rich mascarpone custard and dusted with a thick layer of cocoa powder. A quick rest in the refrigerator allows the flavors to meld and the cookies to soften into a sliceable, silky, coffee-forward “cake.” But head on over to TikTok and you’ll find that tiramisu contains multitudes, including (but not limited to) coconut, strawberry, lemon, Sakura and matcha.

Italians might object to calling these creations “tiramisu,” but we’re all in on this revival. Like the original, its origins are hard to trace, but we suspect it has something to do with the rise of easy entertaining that still feels elegant—thinkupside-down tarts,tinned fishboards andjam seltzer.

Why Tiramisu Is the Ideal Summer Dessert

A dessert thatrequires no oven, can be made ahead and tastes likecoffeeand cream? You don’t have to twist our arm. But for those who haven’t had the pleasure of making (or eating) tiramisu, those are just a few of the reasons it’s gaining steam ahead of the summer months.

For thealfresco entertainer,there’s the fact that you’re guaranteed to getoohs andahhs when you plop a gorgeous bowl of tiramisu on the table…even though no one realizes how easy it was to make. In fact, you whipped it uplast night.

For theminimalist baker,you can (and should) use store-bought ladyfingers, and you can omit the egg white in the traditional meringue-lightened custard for something entirely egg-free. (This is our favorite way to modify tiramisu when serving it to guests who can’t eat raw eggs, like pregnant people and older folks).

And assummer’s bountymakes its farmers market debut, there’s no shortage of tiramisu inspiration. In May and June, use the fresheststrawberriesyou can find and addrhubarbto the mix. Whenblueberriesandraspberriesappear, they’ll be transformed into your next dessert. By August, the stone fruit will be plump, juicy and sweet—we dream ofpeachtiramisu, butplumorcherrywould be just as lovely. (FWIW, finding a recipe is as easy as searching “[insert any fruit] + tiramisu.”)

Tips for Making Tiramisu

No matter the flavor you decide on, there are a few universal tricks that will help you in your tiramisu journey.

  • When dunking the ladyfingers,使用深碗和叉子来降低和解除biscuits into the bowl. Don’t soak themtoolong, or they’ll fall apart—one or two seconds should do the trick.
  • Making the custardtraditionally involves blending egg yolks with mascarpone and whipping the whites into a meringue, but you can also substitute whipped cream for the raw eggs if necessary.
  • Dust the tiramisuwith cocoa (or any other powdered topping)beforeyou refrigerate it, so that the powder hydrates and you don’t inhale you way to a coughing fit at first bite.
  • Build the tiramisuin a vessel you can easily scoop or slice from, but don’t feel limited to a traditional baking dish. A shallow bowl would work, or you could makeminitiramisus in individual ramekins.

Plus, 3 Tiramisu Recipes to Get You Started

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Katherine Gillenis PureWow’s senior food editor. She’s a writer, recipe developer and food stylist with a degree in culinary arts and professional experience in New York City restaurants. She used to sling sugary desserts in a pastry kitchen, but now she’s an avid home cook and fanatic baker.