Fruits

Recipe#11259

Title: Pears 01

rec.food.recipes archive

Pears

Pere al Vino Rosso con Crema Pasticceria

1) To poach the pears, take three pears (I buy whichever are cheapest

and don't worry too much about ripeness.) and peel them. Then slice them

in half lengthwise and core them. Put them in a pot and cover with wine

(~2 cups). Add about 1/2 cup sugar. For more flavor you can add the any

or all of the following ingredients, but I didn't this time: 1 stick

cinnamon, 6 whole cloves, 1 tsp fennel seed, zest of one orange or

lemon. Bring the wine to a boil and simmer for ~ 10 minutes until the

pears are soft but not mushy. Allow the pears and the wine mixture to

cool. (Letting the pears sit lets them absorb more of the red color from

the wine and makes for a more striking presentation.)

2) In the top of a double boiler, combine 6 egg yolks, 4 T sugar, and 6

t flour. Whip with a wire whisk until color becomes less yellow and

mixture is smooth. Add 1 cup milk slowly and whip to combine. Place top

over simmering water and stir with a wooden spoon for about 10 minutes

until mixture thickens to a consistency similar to sauces. You should be

able to coat a wooden spoon with it, wipe a clean line with your finger,

and then turn the spoon so gravity would make the sauce run across the

clean line, but the sauce is thick enough to prevent that. This recipe

is much like a creme anglaise, but should not be as thick. Remove pastry

cream from double boiler and pass through a wire mesh strainer into

another bowl. (Health note: egg yolks have an amazing capacity to

emulsify sauces. Many recipes include many more than are really

necessary. Next time I make this, I'll try just two egg yolks, although

I suspect one would be sufficient.)

3) Remove the pears from the wine with a slotted spoon. If you added

spices to the wine, you should strain them out and pour the wine back

into the pan. Place the wine under the highest heat you can get and

reduce it. (You will reduce it to a small fraction of its original

volume. High heat will save time, and you shouldn't worry about burning

it.) When you get it to almost a sauce consistency, mix ~ 1 T cornstarch

with ~1/2 cup cold water in a cup, using your finger to break up any

lumps. Pour this into the wine. Continue reducing until you get almost

the consistency of jam or jelly. At this point you will probably want to

use a medium heat so you can stop it at the right point. When the sauce

is thick enough, pour it into a bottle with a thin nozzle similar to the

ketchup squirters you see at hamburger stands. If the sauce is thick

enough, it will not come out of the bottle when turned upside down, but

will come out slowly when you squeeze on it. If it's not thick enough,

reduce it some more.

4) Presentation. Yes, this is what makes the dish pretty. Take a white

dessert plate and spoon about 3 tablespoons of the white pastry cream

into the center. Now hold the plate vertical and turn it so that the

sauce coats the entire center of the plate without any on the rim. Grab

the ketchup squirter with the wine sauce in it and draw a series of thin

horizontal lines across the plate spaced by ~1/4". Now use a toothpick,

and drag it across the plate perpendicular to the lines, up and down,

about 1/4" apart. You should now have a beautiful herringbone pattern

much like a decorated cake. Add a small sprig of fresh mint to the top

of the plate. On a cutting board, place a pear half core side down with

the line of the core perpendicular to you, with the top of the pear away

from you. Using a chef knife, slice the pear into thin ~1/4" vertical

slices. Then use your hand to mush the pear slices into a pretty fruit

fan. The red of the outside of the pear will make a pretty contrast to

the white of the inside. Slide your chef knife under the pear and

transfer the pear to the center of the plate. Repeat to make six plates.

5) Do all this before dinner, and chill it. When dessert time comes,

just pull them out of the fridge and serve.

BLACK PEARS

6 fresh pears, hard but edible

juice of one fresh lemon

2 heaping T carob powder

2 T sugar or honey

1/4 t salt

1 c. heavy whipping cream

Cut the pears in half longitudinally, keeping the skin on.

Core, then coat generously with the lemon juice. Either allow

the pears to remain raw, or bake for 7 to 10 minutes in a 350 degree

oven, then cool.

Beat the carob, sugar, and salt until the mixture either peaks or

has the thick consistency of chocolate mousse. Spoon or pipe the

carob cream into the hollows of the pear halves. Chill at least

30 minutes before serving.

Katie

Pears "Catherine"

4 1/2 cups sugar

1+tsp Vanila extract

8 pears

4 cups raspberries or blackberries

2 Tbsp Kirsh liqueur

3 Tbsp finely ground almonds.

Melt 4 cups sugar in 4 1/2 cups sugar. Boil, strain, add vanila extract

and pass through a muslin cloth.

Pour the syrup into a clean pot, add the pears and steam until soft (but not

too soft).

Puree the berries in a bowl. If canned, discard part of the juice.

Add the rest of the sugar and mix with the berries. Add also the liquer.

To serve: Take the pears out of the syrup, pour some of the berry puree

over each pear and straw on top with the almonds.

Enjoy - Gad S. Sheaffer gss@iil.intel.com

Pear Butter

Put pureed pears and sugar in a roaster in a low oven overnight. In the morning it was nice and thick (like apple butter)- put it up in jars.

Great with peanut butter for sandwiches or instead of syrup on pancakes

and waffles.

Doree's Extravagant Almond Cake

1/2 pound almond paste

1 1/4 cups sugar (Note: I use vanilla sugar)

1 cup butter, at room temperature

5 eggs

1 cup sour cream

2 tsp. vanilla extract

1 teaspoon almond extraxt

3 cups flour

1 1/2 tsp. baking powder

1 tsp. baking soda

1/4 tsp. salt

1/2 pound additional almond paste (optional)

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Butter and flour a bundt pan or a 9-inch

springform pan (note: or 2 loaf pans, for tea cake servings).

Combine the almond paste and sugar in a food processor and work until well

blended. Add the butter and continue to process until blended; then add the

eggs, one at a time, the sour cream, and the flavorings. Transfer the mixture

to a mixing bowl.

Sift flour with baking powder, soda, and salt. Add it to the batter a

third at a time, gently stirring in each cupful. For the extravagant

touch, break another 1/2 pound--or less-- almond paste into pieces and fold

them into the batter. Turn the batter into the baking pan and bake the

cake in the middle of the oven until the cake is golden on top and springy

to the touch, about 1 hour (Note: I find that I have to bake the cake for

about an hour and twenty minutes or more to have a bamboo skewer come out

clean.) Remove the cake from the oven and let is stand to cool slightly;

then turn it out onto a serving plate. When cool, dust it with sifted

powdered sugar. This cake will keep well, wrapped tightly, for several

days.

(Huggett variation: Almond Pear Cake. Peel, seed, and lightly puree about

5 Bartlett pear. Or, drain and lightly puree a can (approx 1 lb) of pears.

Heat puree with 1 Tbsp. lemon juice in a saucepan over medium heat until

most of the liquid is reduced and puree resembles a thick applesauce. Should

measure about 1 1/2 cups. Increase to 10-inch springform pan. Stir into

almond mixture before addition of flour. Increase flour by 1/2-3/4 cup.)

WINE-POACHED PEAR TART

1 1/3 cups flour

3/4 cup + 3 Tbs. granulated sugar

1/4 tsp. salt

12 Tbs. butter

1 egg yolk

1 bottle (31/2 cups) white wine

Zest from 1/2 lemon

8 firm pears

1/2 tsp. almound wxtract

1/2 tsp. nutmeg

Combine flour, 2 Tbs. sugar and salt. Cut in 10 Tbs. butter. Mix egg

yolk with 1 Tbs. cold water and toss into flour mixture. Gather into a ball.

Roll and fit into a 10" tart pan. Bake at 375 for 40 minutes. Combine wine,

3/4 cup sugar and zest and bring to a boil. Peel, halve, and core the pears.

Add them to the pot, cover and simmer 20 minutes. Remove 6 pear halves and

continue cooking remaining pears 15 minutes. Remove remaining pears and

process them with extract and nutmeg. spread puree in tart shell. Slice

reserved pears and arrange on top. Sprinkle with one Tbs. sugar and broil

untill lightly browned.

PIQUECHAGNE (LE POIRAT)

1-1/2 lb pears, peeled, cored and quartered

1 TBS sugar

1/2 C. heavy cream, whipped very lightly

1-3/4 C. flour

1/2 C. walnuts, finely ground

1 tsp cinnamon

1 egg

2/3 C. sugar

5 oz butter

Grind walnuts with 2 TBS flour in food processor. Add remaining flour, sugar

and cinnnamon. Cut in butter. Blend in eggs to make a ball of dough. If ball

will not form add cold water 1 tsp at a time. Chill 30 minutes.

Roll out 2/3 dough and line a pie pan with it. Arrange pears in a cartwheel

fashion around the outside and fill center with the rest.

Roll out remaining pastry to make top crust. Cut a 2-1/2" hole in the center.

Brush edge of bottom crust with cold water and press to seal on top crust.

Brush top crust with water and sprinkle on sugar. Chill until pastry is firm.

Bake at 375 degrees for 30-40 minutes until browned and pears are tender.

Serve warm. Just before serving, pour the whipped cream into the center.

Fruit Souffle'

This fruit souffle, made without a cream-sauce base, is as light as a

cloud, a delicate reminder of summer during the long, cold winter months.

Use canned applesauce, apricots, sour cherries, or pineapple or fresh

berries, apricots, pears, or peaches. None of these fruits need cooking,

but they should be well drained. The hot fruit puree will set and

stabilize the egg whites.

3/4 cup fresh or canned fruit puree

1 TBS freshly squeezed lemon juice

Pinch of salt

Sugar to taste

3 egg whites

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Butter a 1 quart souffle dish and

sprinkle it with sugar. Heat the fruit puree in a small pan. Add the lemon

juice, salt, and sugar, and stir to blend; remove from the heat. Beat the

egg whites until stiff but not dry and stir them into the hot puree until

evenly blended. Spoon into the souffle dish and bake for 20-25 minutes.

Pear and Walnut Salad.

Peel, core and slice ripe pears and sprinkle with lemon juice. Pour over a

little pear brandy if available, or kirsch or white rum. At serving time,

sprinkle with chopped walnuts.

GLAZED PEAR FLAN

Pastry: 1 c. flour

dash of salt

3 T. sugar

6 T. butter or margarine

1 slightly beaten egg yolk

1/2 t. vanilla

Filling: 1 can (16 oz.) pears

2 packages (3 oz. each) cream cheese,

softened

1 1/2 T. pear syrup

2 T. powdered sugar

1/2 t. almond extract (OR 3 T. Amaretto)

1/3 c. apricot preserves

1 T. pear syrup

2 T. sliced almonds

To make pastry, mix flour, salt and sugar. Cut in butter until

mixture is crumbly. Blend in egg yolk and vanilla. Chill 30 minutes.

Roll pastry on lightly floured surface to an 11-inch circle.

Carefully fit into 9 1/2-inch flan pan with removable bottom, pressing

pastry firmly against sides. Prick bottom and sides with fork. Bake

at 400 degrees F. for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 and bake 5

minutes longer. Cool thoroughly.

To make filling, drain and slice pears, reserving syrup. Combine

cream cheese, 1 1/2 T pear syrup, sugar and almond extract. Spread in

bottom of pastry. Arrange pear slices lengthwise on top of filling so

that there is a pear slice on each to-be-cut piece. Heat apricot

preserves and 1 T. pear syrup. Cool slightly. Spoon over pears.

Refrigerate and sprinkle with almonds beofre serving.

Note: If using fresh pears, pare 3 winter pears (Bosc, D'Anjou)

leaving on stems. Poach them in 2 c. rose wine, 1 c. sugar, few drops

red food coloring (optional). Bring to a boil then simmer 30-40 min.

Caramelized Pear Tart

Pastry:

14 Tbsp. butter, softened

1/2 cup sugar

3 egg yolks

zest of 1 lemon, grated

3/4 cup finely ground almonds

1 3/4 cups flour

Filling:

2 1/2 lbs. ripe, firm pears, peeled, cored, and cubed

(or large can of pears drained/cubed, though not as good)

8 Tbsp. butter

3/4 cup sugar

1/3 cup toasted almonds

Cream butter and sugar until smooth. Add egg yolks and zest, mix well.

Add almonds and flour, mix well. Form into ball, wrap with plastic, and

chill 1 hr.

Grease 10 inch tart pan with removable bottom. On lightly floured

surface, roll out dough to 1/8 inch thickness. Transfer to pan and press

to bottom and sides. Line dough with foil and fill with pie weights or

dried beans. Bake at 400 degrees(F) for 20 minutes. Remove foil and

weights, bake 3 minutes until golden.

While crust is baking, melt butter in large, heavy skillet. Over medium

heat, saute pears until tender.* Sprinkle with the sugar and cook until

fruit is caramelized(golden brown.) Place filling in baked crust and

sprinkle with toasted almonds. Serve warm or chilled.

* If using canned pears, don't cook the pears first--add sugar with pears.

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