There is something quietly magical about a fool. No oven, no thermometer, no fuss — just ripe fruit folded into softly whipped cream until the whole thing turns into a pale, rosy, cloud-like dessert that looks far more impressive than the effort it demands. The raspberry fool is one of the oldest British desserts, dating back to the sixteenth century, and it has endured for a simple reason: it is genuinely, unassumingly delicious. The berries bleed their bright color and tart perfume into the cream, and every spoonful is simultaneously rich and refreshing.
What makes this version stand out is the use of erythritol, a naturally occurring sugar alcohol found in fruits and fermented foods, as the sole sweetener for both the fruit compote and the whipped cream. Unlike many sugar-free substitutes, erythritol dissolves cleanly, carries no bitter aftertaste, and behaves almost identically to granulated sugar in cold applications like this one. A small amount of fresh lemon zest and a half teaspoon of vanilla paste lift every element of the dessert, sharpening the raspberry flavor and rounding out the cream so nothing tastes flat or one-dimensional. The result is a fool that tastes fully, unapologetically sweet without a gram of added sugar.
This recipe is rated easy and is genuinely approachable for any home cook, whether you bake regularly or not. It requires only a bowl, a whisk or hand mixer, and a saucepan. It is perfect for anyone managing blood sugar, following a low-carb or keto lifestyle, or simply looking for a lighter dessert that still feels like a real treat. Dress it up in champagne coupes for a dinner party or pile it into tumblers on a weeknight — either way, it delivers.
6
servings
Ingredients
- 450 gfresh or frozen raspberries (about 3.5 cups; if frozen, thaw and drain excess liquid)
- 80 ggranulated erythritol, divided (about 6 tablespoons), plus more to taste
- 1 tbspfresh lemon juice
- 1 tspfinely grated lemon zest
- 480 mlheavy whipping cream, very cold (2 cups)
- 0.5 tsppure vanilla paste or vanilla extract
- —Pinch of fine sea salt
- 60 gfresh raspberries for garnish (about 0.5 cup)
- —Fresh mint leaves for garnish, optional
Ingredient Substitutions
Instructions
🔧 Equipment
- Make the raspberry compote: Combine 350g of the raspberries (reserve 100g for folding in fresh), 50g of the erythritol, the lemon juice, lemon zest, and a pinch of fine sea salt in a small saucepan over medium heat. Cook, stirring and gently pressing the berries with a wooden spoon, for 6 to 8 minutes until the raspberries have completely broken down, the mixture is thick and jammy, and the erythritol has fully dissolved. Taste and add more erythritol if needed — erythritol is about 70 percent as sweet as sugar, so be generous.
- Transfer the compote to a bowl and press a sheet of plastic wrap directly against the surface to prevent a skin from forming. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes until completely cold. Do not rush this step — warm compote will deflate your whipped cream on contact.
- While the compote chills, place your mixing bowl and whisk attachment in the freezer for 10 minutes. Cold equipment is the single most important factor in achieving stable, voluminous whipped cream. Pour the cold heavy cream into the chilled bowl, add the remaining 30g of erythritol and the vanilla paste, and whip on medium-high speed with a hand mixer or stand mixer until the cream holds firm, billowy peaks that just hold their shape without looking grainy or over-whipped. This takes 2 to 4 minutes depending on your mixer.
- Gently fold the cold compote into the whipped cream in two additions using a large rubber spatula. Use a light, scooping motion from the bottom of the bowl upward — do not stir. Stop when you still see distinct swirls of raspberry and cream. A fully uniform pale pink fool is lovely, but a swirled, marbled fool looks even more beautiful and preserves more textural contrast.
- Fold in the reserved 100g of fresh raspberries with one or two gentle turns so some berries remain whole and visible.
- Divide the fool among 6 serving glasses or bowls. Cover loosely and refrigerate for at least 1 hour before serving (up to 4 hours). Just before serving, top each glass with a few fresh raspberries and a mint leaf if using. Serve cold.
- Place 350g of the raspberries in a bowl. Sprinkle over 50g of the erythritol, the lemon juice, and lemon zest. Using a fork, roughly mash the berries until about half are broken down into a rough puree and half remain in chunks. Stir to combine.
- Cover the bowl and let the mixture macerate at room temperature for 30 minutes. The erythritol will draw out the berry juices and dissolve into a natural syrup. Taste and adjust sweetness. If the mixture looks very watery, drain off a tablespoon or two of excess liquid to keep the fool from becoming too loose.
- Chill the macerating bowl in the refrigerator for 15 minutes while you prepare the cream. Place your mixing bowl and whisk in the freezer for 10 minutes, then whip the cold cream with the remaining 30g erythritol and vanilla paste on medium-high speed until firm peaks form, about 2 to 4 minutes.
- Fold the cold raw raspberry mixture into the whipped cream in two additions using a rubber spatula, using a gentle scooping motion. Stop when the mixture is beautifully swirled. Fold in the reserved 100g whole fresh raspberries.
- Spoon into serving glasses, cover, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes before serving. The fool is best consumed within 2 hours using this method, as the raw berry mixture releases more liquid over time. Top with fresh raspberries and mint just before serving.
- Prepare the raspberry compote following steps 1 and 2 of the No-Bake method above. Allow it to cool completely in the refrigerator.
- Whip the cold heavy cream with 30g erythritol and vanilla paste in a chilled bowl on medium-high speed until the cream holds firm, stiff peaks — slightly stiffer than you would for the chilled fool, as the extra structure helps the frozen dessert hold its texture. Take care not to go so far that the cream begins to look curdled.
- Fold the cold compote into the whipped cream in two additions with a rubber spatula until swirled but not fully blended. Fold in the reserved 100g fresh raspberries.
- Transfer the mixture to a freezer-safe container or loaf pan (a 9×5 inch loaf pan works well). Smooth the top with an offset spatula. Press a sheet of plastic wrap directly against the surface to prevent ice crystals from forming.
- Freeze for at least 4 hours, or overnight. Remove from the freezer 8 to 10 minutes before serving to soften slightly. Scoop into glasses or slice like a terrine. Garnish with fresh raspberries and mint. Store frozen for up to 2 weeks.
Nutrition Per Serving
Per 1 serving (makes 6 individual dessert glasses (approximately 200ml each))
Sweetener: erythritol
Why This Recipe Works
The science of a great fool comes down to two things: fat and cold. Heavy cream whips because the fat globules in cold cream, when agitated by a whisk, trap air bubbles and cluster around them in a semi-solid foam. If the cream is too warm, the fat stays liquid and the bubbles escape before they can be captured. This is why chilling your bowl, whisk, and cream is not optional — it is the most important technique in this entire recipe. Similarly, the compote must be completely cold before folding, because even slightly warm fruit will partially melt the fat structure you worked hard to build, resulting in a loose, weeping fool instead of a pillowy one.
Erythritol behaves interestingly in cold applications. Unlike sucrose, which depresses the freezing point of water significantly, erythritol has a much smaller effect on water activity. This means that in the chilled fool, it sweetens without thinning the cream structure the way an equivalent amount of dissolved sugar might. In the frozen semi-freddo version, erythritol actually helps keep the dessert scoopable: it does not lock into ice crystals the way sucrose does, so the frozen fool stays softer and more pleasant to eat straight from the freezer. One note: erythritol can sometimes produce a faint cooling sensation on the palate, particularly in large quantities. The lemon zest and vanilla in this recipe are deliberate counterbalances — they occupy the flavor receptors and draw attention away from any residual cooling effect.
The two-stage raspberry approach (cooked compote plus whole fresh berries) is intentional. Cooking breaks down the fruit cells and concentrates the flavor and color dramatically, giving the fool its deep raspberry backbone. The reserved raw berries folded in at the end add brightness, texture, and bursts of fresh acidity that the cooked compote alone cannot provide. If the fool ever tastes flat, a tiny extra squeeze of lemon juice stirred gently through the finished dessert will sharpen everything immediately.
Baker’s Tips
- Always use very cold heavy cream straight from the refrigerator. If your kitchen is warm, nest your mixing bowl in a larger bowl filled with ice water while you whip.
- Erythritol is about 70 percent as sweet as regular sugar. Taste the compote before it goes into the fridge and adjust sweetness generously — flavors mellow slightly when cold.
- Do not overwhip the cream. Stop the moment you see firm peaks that hold their shape. Overwhipped cream turns grainy and then buttery, and it cannot be rescued once folded into the fool.
- For the cleanest presentation, use a piping bag fitted with a large round tip to fill the serving glasses in neat layers.
- If using frozen raspberries, drain them thoroughly in a sieve for 20 minutes after thawing and pat gently with paper towels. Excess water will make the fool weep and dilute the flavor.
- Powdering your erythritol in a spice grinder before using it in the whipped cream helps it dissolve more evenly and eliminates any grittiness in the finished dessert.
- A tiny pinch of salt in both the compote and the cream is non-negotiable — it suppresses bitterness, enhances the fruit flavor, and makes the sweetness taste rounder and more balanced.
Variations
- Raspberry Rose Fool: Add 1 teaspoon of rosewater to the compote while it cooks for a floral, perfumed version. Garnish with dried rose petals.
- Lemon Raspberry Fool: Fold 2 tablespoons of sugar-free lemon curd (sweetened with allulose) into the whipped cream before adding the raspberry compote for a more complex, citrus-forward dessert.
- Raspberry Fool Trifle: Layer the fool with crumbled almond flour shortbread cookies and extra fresh raspberries in a large glass bowl for a show-stopping sugar-free trifle.
- Dairy-Free Version: Replace the heavy cream with two cans (800ml total) of full-fat coconut cream, chilled overnight. Scoop out only the solid white cream and whip as directed. The fool will have a subtle tropical flavor and a slightly denser texture.
- Strawberry Fool: Substitute 450g hulled, quartered strawberries for the raspberries. Mash more aggressively in the compote as strawberries are firmer. The result is sweeter and more summery.
Troubleshooting & FAQ
My fool looks watery and is leaking liquid into the bottom of the glass. What went wrong?
My whipped cream deflated when I folded in the raspberry mixture. How do I prevent this?
I can feel a gritty or cooling sensation from the erythritol. How do I fix this?
My fool tastes flat and not very raspberry-forward. What can I do?
My frozen semi-freddo version is rock-hard and difficult to scoop. What happened?
Storage & Make-Ahead
- Storage: Store covered in serving glasses or in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. The fool will soften and release a little liquid over time — give it a gentle stir before serving if made more than 4 hours ahead. Do not store at room temperature. The frozen semi-freddo version keeps for up to 2 weeks in the freezer.
- Make-Ahead: The raspberry compote can be made up to 3 days ahead and kept covered in the refrigerator. The whipped cream is best made fresh, but the fully assembled fool can be refrigerated up to 4 hours before serving with minimal texture loss. For the best presentation at a dinner party, assemble the glasses up to 2 hours ahead and add the fresh garnish just before serving.






