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Quince Paste

4

230 min

Quince Paste

Quince Paste Photo 1

Category

Jam Recipes

Time

230 min

Serving

32 persons

Calories

170

Rating

4.00★ (9)

Cuisine

Author: Victoria Buriak
Quince paste is a wonderful accompaniment to cheese and crackers; You can try it with chèvre as well as other mild, firm cheeses. You can also serve it for breakfast in place of jam. Quince is an old-fashioned, intensely aromatic, and dearly loved fruit. It is not an easy fruit to prepare, as it needs to be poached or cooked before it can be used in recipes.

Ingredients

  • ½ pounds ripe quinces: 4 piece
  • ½ cups white sugar: 5 piece
  • water to cover:

Metric Conversion

Stages of cooking

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  1. Wash, peel, and core quinces, reserving cores and peels. Coarsely chop flesh and transfer fruit to a large pan. Wrap cores and peels in cheesecloth, tie the bag with kitchen string and add it to the pan. (The peels contain most of fruit's pectin, which contributes to the firmness of quince paste.)
    Quince Paste Photo 2
  2. Pour in enough water to cover quinces and boil, with the pan partly covered, 30 to 40 minutes or until fruit is soft. Remove the bag of peels and pass quince flesh through a sieve or food mill. (For best results, don't use a food processor as it will result in too fine a texture.) You should have about 2 1/2 pounds of fruit pulp.
    Quince Paste Photo 3
  3. Transfer quince pulp to a saucepan and add sugar. Ideally, you should add the same amount of sugar, by weight, as fruit pulp. Cook and stir over low heat until sugar is dissolved. Continue cooking for about 1 1/2 hours, frequently stirring with a wooden spoon, until paste becomes very thick and has a deep orange color. Draw the wooden spoon along the bottom of the saucepan: it should leave a trail, and quince mixture will stick to the spoon.
    Quince Paste Photo 4
  4. Lightly grease a 9x13-inch baking dish or line it with greased parchment paper. Transfer quince paste to the baking dish, spreading it about 1 1/2 inches thick. Smooth the top and allow it to cool.
    Quince Paste Photo 5
  5. Dry paste for about 1 1/2 hours on your lowest oven setting, no more than 125 degrees F (52 degrees C). Allow quince paste to cool completely before slicing. In Europe, the traditional method of drying quince paste is to leave it in a cupboard for about 7 days. The remaining juices will continue to evaporate and render a drier paste.
    Quince Paste Photo 6
  6. Store quince paste in an airtight container in the refrigerator; the color will deepen with age.
    Quince Paste Photo 7

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