It was a recipe in the paper, and the photo accompanying it was so attractive I had to make it. The results of my concoction are less pretty (I think I overcooked the pears, so they are a bit disintegrated, clouding the liquid in the bottles), but they are still pretty, and the flavor is quite tasty.
Pears Preserved in Madeira with Bay
8-10 Seckel or Forelle pears
1 Tbl lemon juice
750 ml bottle of Madeira
1 cup sugar
1-2 cups water
8-10 fresh bay leaves (dry is okay if fresh is unavailable)
Peel, halve and core pears, and let them sit in a bowl of water with the lemon juice added while you prepare the liquid.
Bring the Madeira, sugar and water to a boil in a large pan. Add pear halves (with slotted spoon) and bay leaves. Turn down heat, and let simmer for 30-40 minutes until pears are tender but not falling apart.
Meanwhile, fill canning jars with boiling (or very hot) water and let sit.
When pears are cooked, empty the jars and spoon in the pears (if you want them to look pretty, try to slide them into the jar pointed end up). Remove bay leaves from the liquid, and let it come to a boil again. Ladle liquid over pears (enough that the top of the jar is all liquid, no pears showing). Slide bay leaves into jar, one leaf per pear.
Close jar and process. (I boiled the filled jars for 10 minutes, which has always worked for jam.)
Note: You can make this with other pears (Bartletts are said to be the best flavor; Bosc hold their shape nicely and have a spicier flavor that would blend nicely). You will need only about half as many pears. Do not halve the liquid, however -- you'll still need as much.
Variant: Substitute Port for Madeira, and a Vanilla Bean (or two) for the Bay Leaves. I think this would make a very sweet concoction, good for serving over ice cream. (I haven't made that version.)
1 comment:
I made them, too, but your picture is prettier than mine.
I couldn't fit all of them in jars - so I already ate the little bit that was left. Really good.
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