What's in Season
April 22, 2026

What’s in Season: Passionfruit Panna Cotta with White Chocolate Shards, Passionfruit Curd & Mango Passionfruit Coulis

Learn how to make a silky Panama Passionfruit Panna Cotta at home with the perfect wobble, plus passionfruit curd, white chocolate shards and mango passionfruit coulis.
Passionfruit Panna Cotta with White Chocolate Shards, Passionfruit Curd & Mango Passionfruit Coulis 1

This Panama Passionfruit Panna Cotta is the sort of dessert that makes people think you have done something highly technical in the kitchen. It has that beautiful creamy texture, the gentle wobble every cooking show talks about, and the moment of suspense when it comes out of the mould.

But here is the truth — panna cotta is not difficult.

For The Cooks Collective, this is exactly the kind of dish worth learning because it proves that restaurant-quality food can be made easily at home once you understand the technique. The secret is not fancy equipment, complicated pastry skills, or chef-only knowledge. It is knowing how to heat the cream properly, how to use gelatine correctly, when to fold in the fruit, and how to unmould the panna cotta with confidence.

Cooking shows love to build up the drama.
Will it come out? Will it hold its shape? Has it got the right wobble?

Great television perhaps — but in a real home kitchen, a few simple techniques make this dish very achievable.

This version uses the tropical brightness of Panama passionfruit, folded through the panna cotta base once it has thickened slightly so the pulp stays suspended through the dessert instead of sinking to the bottom. It is then finished with Pepe Saya Passionfruit Curd, white chocolate shards, and Island Harvest Tasmania Mango and Passionfruit Coulis for a dessert that looks polished, tastes balanced, and feels a little bit special.

Recipe

Serves: 4- 6
Prep time: 20 minutes
Infusion time: 30 minutes
Chilling time: Overnight preferred
Difficulty: Easy to moderate
Style: Make-ahead plated dessert
Suitable for: Entertaining, dinner parties, warm weather desserts, learning core dessert techniques

Ingredients

For the panna cotta
  • 220 ml milk
  • 350 ml cream
  • 35 g caster sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste with seeds
  • Pinch of salt
  • 10 g gelatine powder
  • 2 tablespoons water
  • Pulp of 2 Panama passionfruit
To finish
  • 1 teaspoon Pepe Saya Passionfruit Curd per serve
  • White chocolate shards, for garnish
  • Island Harvest Tasmania Mango and Passionfruit Coulis, for plating
Method
  1. In a saucepan, combine the milk, cream.
  2. Heat gently until the mixture reaches 85°C, making sure it does not boil.
  3. Add caster sugar, vanilla bean paste and pinch of salt.
  4. Remove from the heat and leave to infuse for 30 minutes.
  5. In a small bowl, mix the gelatine powder with 2 tablespoons of water. Stir well and leave to stand for 1 minute.
  6. Microwave the gelatine mixture for 20 seconds, or until the powder has fully dissolved.
  7. Whisk the dissolved gelatine into the warm milk and cream mixture until fully incorporated.
  8. Place the mixture in the fridge and chill until it reaches the consistency of thickened cream.
  9. Remove from the fridge and whisk in the passionfruit pulp until evenly blended through the mixture.
  10. Lightly grease your moulds and pour in the panna cotta mixture.
  11. Cover and refrigerate until fully set, preferably overnight.
To Serve
  1. Carefully run a small knife around the inside edge of each mould.
  2. Gently tip the panna cotta out onto a serving plate.
  3. Spoon Island Harvest Tasmania Mango and Passionfruit Coulis onto the plate.
  4. Top the panna cotta with 1 teaspoon of Pepe Saya Passionfruit Curd.
  5. Finish with a few white chocolate shards.

Serve chilled.

Chef’s Tips

√ Whisking the passionfruit pulp into the mixture once it has thickened slightly helps keep the pulp suspended throughout the panna cotta rather than letting it sink to the bottom.

√ The Pepe Saya Passionfruit Curd adds a slight tartness that helps balance the sweetness of the dish.

√ If the panna cotta does not release easily, place the mould into a bowl of hot water for 5–10 seconds only. Do not overdo this step, or the outer layer may begin to melt.

√ The perfect panna cotta should hold its shape but still have that soft, delicate wobble. That wobble is the sign you have the set right.

Skills Video Ideas
  • How to bloom and dissolve powdered gelatine properly
  • Why panna cotta should be heated gently, not boiled
  • What the correct panna cotta “wobble” looks like
  • The thickened cream stage: when to add fruit pulp
  • How to unmould panna cotta neatly and confidently at home
Plating / Serving Notes

This dessert suits a clean plate and a restrained finish.

Spoon a small pool or swipe of Island Harvest Tasmania Mango and Passionfruit Coulis onto the plate first, then place the panna cotta slightly off-centre. Top with the Passionfruit Curd and finish with a few shards of white chocolate for height, texture and contrast.

The finish should feel elegant rather than overloaded. Let the panna cotta remain the hero.

Why the Pepe Saya Passionfruit Curd? It adds the perfect tartness to balance the sweetness of the panna cotta, along with the richness Pepe Saya is known for through its famous cultured butter.

Why the Island Harvest Tasmania Mango & Passionfruit Coulis? It brings vibrancy, tropical warmth and freshness to the plate, helping turn a simple panna cotta into a dessert that feels bright, balanced and beautifully finished.

Quick & Easy White Chocolate Shards:

An easy way to finish this dish is to use your favourite white chocolate bar from the supermarket and shave or slice it into shards. The Nocutu Mandoline from our pantry makes light work of this, though a potato peeler will work to.

Optional Variations / Make-Ahead Hack

This is an excellent make-ahead dessert because it can be prepared the day before and left to set overnight in the fridge.

You could also vary the finish depending on what you have on hand:

  • Replace the white chocolate shards with toasted coconut for a more tropical feel
  • Add a few fresh passionfruit seeds over the top for extra texture
  • Serve with a crisp biscuit or shortbread on the side for contrast
  • Swap the coulis for a berry coulis if you want a sharper fruit note
Skill Focus / Techniques

This recipe is a great introduction to a few core dessert skills:

  • gently heating dairy
  • using powdered gelatine correctly
  • understanding texture and set
  • suspending fruit through a mixture
  • unmoulding with confidence
  • plating a simple dessert in a refined way

It is a very good reminder that restaurant-quality desserts often come down to technique, not complexity.

Final Thought from Chef Ian

Panna cotta is one of those dishes that can look intimidating until you understand what is really going on. Once you know the method, it becomes one of the simplest ways to create a dessert that feels polished and professional.

That famous wobble everyone talks about is not luck. It comes from getting the set right.
And the unmoulding? That does not need to be a dramatic cooking show moment either. A couple of simple techniques are all you need.

This is exactly what I want Cooks Collective members to take from recipes like this — food that looks restaurant quality, but is completely achievable at home when you know how.

Watch the Full Tutorial 👉 YouTube Link