Showing posts with label Sweet preserved. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweet preserved. Show all posts

6 Mar 2008

Preserved Figs

figs

I have to say that I didn’t much cook in our last vacation. We dine and lunched in restaurants the most of the time. But, after three or four days I was

tired of dinning out.

Then, I resolve eat some homemade meal. We bought fresh pasta and I just made the sauce. For dessert, I made in previous day figs preserve in syrup.

In the backyard we have a beautiful fig tree and watching the fruits I thought:

“So, if I use those figs to make something good?” If I left it in the tree, certainly the birds ruin the most of the fruits, in fact, I saw some fruit bites. The most of the figs were ripe and I love figs preserved. So, I selected the perfect ones and I went to the kitchen, with the hard idea to post the recipe for you. But unfortunately the bluethoot didn’t work .But never mind, I post the recipe today and I have one more jar full, that I bring here, in my fridge that I am pretending create something good to share.

Preserved Figs

  • 1 kg fresh figs, unpeeled
  • 1 kg sugar
  • 1 glass water
  • Juice of one lemon

Method

To prepare fruit:

Select only perfect figs, ripe but not soft. Rise fig well in cold water.

To make preserves,

place alternate layers of sugar and figs in an enamel kettle. Let stand overnight. Drain off syrup and bring it to a boil. Drop in figs a few at a time. Cook until tender, transparent and amber colored (about 1 to 1 1/2 hours). Add juice of lemon, cook 10 minutes longer. Remove figs from the syrup. Fill hot, dry, sterilized jars 3/4 full with preserved fruit. Cook syrup until thick. If paraffin is to be used, add enough syrup to fill the jar to 1/2" from the top. Close and process in boiling water bath for five minutes

9 Sept 2007

Kumquat in light syrup





Some days ago I was without inspiration to cook. I have the habit of going to the supermarket or the grocery to see and find inspiration to prepare the food. Sometimes, it can be different cuts from meat, poultry or fish that would inspire me .... But the inspiration doesn't arrive and passing in the grocery’s cash (there is one stupendous near here) with a laconic lettuce plant, when I saw those tinny and small oranges. They were kumquat. At the same moment I thought of making them in syrup, those small oranges have a very fine shell and eatable twist, it is the only orange that has their eatable shell in raw. I like fruits in syrup, mainly the citric fruits.That contrast among sweet and acid made me crazy. The recipe is simple to make, takes its time, but it is not difficult and the result is great.

Update This is my contribution from AFAM, hosted this month for Margot from Coffee & Vanilla an amazing blog with fabulous Caribbean European recipes

Kumquat in light syrup

1 Kg kumquat

The same weight in sugar

Wather

Wash the oranges well and boil in water, after that first boil allow to cool.

Cut an extremity and hole the shell with a toothpick or with a fork carefully for not repairing the fruit.

Weigh and put in a big pan with the same weight in sugar and cover with water.

Boil during five minutes and to reserve one day for the following step

Boil the following day until the shells are translucent.

During the boil gray foam can appear, retire with a tablespoon, this way the syrup will be transparent.