Paste of the Quince that Hit You

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Noel and I spent two days making a giant pile of quince paste. This is not recommended as a regular activity, unless you want to build really burly arms. I will describe the process in less than perfect detail:

Wash and dry quince, then roast in covered pans for an hour and a half or so. Here we have two of our three roasting pans of quince. Num.

Roasted quince

The other option is to peel and core the quince then boil the heck out of them, but that seemed like a lot of work. Once the quince were roasted, peeling was basically irrelevant, though you can still peel them if you want, and coring was easy.

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Then we put the chunks in the Cuisinart and processed the heck out of them. No simple chopping here; I let the blades turn that stuff into mush. You could not tell where the skin had been. I love that machine.

The recipe we had suggested using a food mill. This is crazy-talk. There is no need for a food mill when you have electricity and a Cuisinart. And you're about to work out enough with the stirring.

Then you measure the paste, add its equal volume of sugar, and boil this on the stove for, like, four hundred hours while stirring constantly and dodging spatters of hot quince paste, as your arms slowly lose feeling and grip strength and soon you are not sure you wanted arms to begin with and what would it take to design a little stirring robot that could do this for you? (I want this stirring robot BAD.)

Noel did all the stirring, thank goodness. You stir the stuff until it's lost about half its volume and is coming together as a solid. This is why we used the roasted quince method. The more water, the longer the stirring. We worked from waterless quince mush and each batch took about an hour or more to cook down. Can you imagine with water?

When it's nice and thick, you pour it into a mold (we used oiled roasting pans and non-stick cupcake tins; both worked fine, though if you plan to give the finished product as a gift go with a cupcake mold for nice-sized cakes, maybe even shaped cupcakes if you're feeling fancy) and let it cool. Then you cover it with plastic wrap and chill it overnight in the fridge, to get any last thoughts of escape out of it.

The next day you can use a spatula to encourage the stick cakes to flobble out on the counter, where you catch them and wrap them firmly in plastic then stuff them back in the fridge for storage.

Quince paste pile in the fridge

This stuff keeps for MONTHS, although it is tasty enough that it may not last that long. We have a big loaf we're planning to take to a party on Saturday; there will not likely be any leftovers.

Next up: Asian Pear jelly, because we had a bunch of windfall fruit come down unripe. Perfect for jelly-making!

2 Comments

Well, save one for me!

Of course there is one (or more, if you'd like) for you. Silly Herself.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Ayse published on September 13, 2007 3:02 PM.

Highlights from the Trip was the previous entry in this blog.

A Brief Knitting Vacation is the next entry in this blog.

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