Monday, October 19, 2009

Apple-Quince Sauce

What a pain it is when your better half has a completely irrational food aversion. It forces you to avoid certain ingredients or possibly even entire categories of food—food that you yourself might otherwise enjoy—or risk whining, countless complaints, or worse yet, “yuck face”.

Well, my husband hates quinces (and pears too—he says it’s a texture thing), and considering that we planted a quince tree in our backyard a couple of years ago and are now inundated with quinces, that’s a problem. Sharing the harvest with family and friends made a good dent in our quince supply. Now what do I do with the rest? I can think of dozens of tasty things I could make with these quinces, but I have to admit I’m never very motivated to go to the trouble of cooking something just for myself. So I determined to come up with a dish that the hubby would like too. I thought about making a quince crumble with a pecan streusel topping. But then I remembered he doesn’t eat pecans either…

After much brainstorming, a sudden craving for some comfort food, and the need to use up some of the apples from our trip to the orchard, Apple-Quince Sauce seemed like the way to go.


The dual strategy of diffusing the quince flavor with apples and creating a brown butter cookie distraction worked, Hubby approved!

Apple-Quince Sauce
Printable Recipe

2 quinces
¼ cup sugar
1 cup water
4 Braeburn apples

Quarter and core the quinces. Combine the quinces, sugar, and water in a medium, heavy saucepan. Bring to a boil and simmer, covered, stirring occasionally, for about an hour and 15 minutes, or until the quinces turn pink. Quarter and core the apples, add to the pan, and simmer, covered, stirring occasionally, for another 45 minutes, or until the apples are very tender. Remove from the heat and let cool. Puree in a food mill using a fine disc.

Makes about 1 ¼ quarts. Quinces have lots of pectin and turn a rosy color when cooked, so using them in combination with apples makes for a very flavorful thick sauce that’s a pretty shade of pink. Any variety of cooking apple may be used instead of the Braeburns. If you prefer applesauce that’s on the sweet side, feel free to add more sugar. Flavor the sauce with cinnamon, vanilla, or lemon zest if you like. There is no need to peel the fruit because the food mill will remove almost all of the skins. Keeps for several days tightly sealed in the refrigerator. Serve either warm or chilled.

5 comments:

anna said...

Wow, look at that magnificent color! You know how I feel about quinces, but I actually have an aversion to pears as well, though on the opposite end of the scale - I like them ok when they're soft, though the flavor always disappoints me, but I can't stand crunchy-juicy fruit. I recoil from Asian pears and I can't stand the juicier, more popular varieties of apples like Fuji and Honeysap. Velvety-soft poached quince, though? Bring it on! Uh, and some of those brown butter cookies, too, if you don't mind...

Irina said...

He will eat Quince varenie. It will have none of the texture and all the flavor. Love, mom

Irina said...

Here is the recipe, exactly what baba used to make http://vseprodom.com/zagotovki/varenie/aiva/varene-iz-ajvy/

avaserfi said...

Is there any tool that can be used in place of the food mill? If I peel the fruits can I blend them?

Lucy Vaserfirer said...

avaserfi,
The sauce will come out a little chunkier, but you can use a potato masher. Peel the fruit before cooking it.

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