{"id":8993,"date":"2016-01-09T14:42:05","date_gmt":"2016-01-09T19:42:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/orangette.net\/?p=8993"},"modified":"2016-02-12T19:07:53","modified_gmt":"2016-02-13T00:07:53","slug":"quince","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2016\/01\/quince\/","title":{"rendered":"On esoteric fruit"},"content":{"rendered":"
I first tasted quince the first time I had dinner with my first editor, an exceedingly kind, thoughtful woman of whom I nonetheless was terrified<\/a>, because she was very New York Publishing World, and because she was my first editor. She had let me choose the restaurant, which only ratcheted up the stakes. I’m surprised that I don’t remember what I wore, because I surely would have labored over the decision with a\u00a0degree of care most commonly seen among people\u00a0handling live explosives. The evening went better than I had expected: she told a funny story about her cat and gracefully ignored my elaborate, enthusiastic\u00a0mispronunciation of the white wine she’d ordered. And when we arrived at dessert, she opened the menu and beamed.\u00a0“Quince!” she nearly cheered, “I’ll have the quince.”<\/p>\n What arrived was a martini glass – I think? though sometimes I also think my memory is garbage? – containing\u00a0a scoop of housemade ice cream topped with small, pink, mathematically perfect cubes of what I now know to be poached quince, and on top of that, crumbly nubs of\u00a0ginger streusel. She spooned up a bite, and as she chewed, her eyelids fluttered. Then she nudged the glass across the table to me.<\/p>\n Quince is an esoteric fruit, hard to find and, once you’ve found it, difficult to subdue. It’s a member of the same family as apples and pears, and it looks a lot like\u00a0both, though its flesh is more dense and harder by far. It’s knobby, green when it’s not quite ripe and golden when it is, often covered in grayish-white fuzz, like a peach. It’s too hard and sour to eat raw, like raw rhubarb but\u00a0worse, and it needs a long, slow cook before it will\u00a0submit to being eaten. I would not write about quince if it weren’t worth the hassle. It is.<\/p>\n Though I will admit that I have occasionally been guilty of buying one not to eat it, but just to keep it next to the sink\u00a0and sniff it.\u00a0Perfume<\/em> is the best word for what a ripe quince smells like, a little like cooked apples, a little like wine, a little like lemon peel, a lot like flowers. It can fill a room. It’s so potent, it’s its own caricature, a\u00a0quince-scented Yankee Candle as engineered by Nature herself. As a kid, I loved the smell of gasoline and was always rolling down the window and taking deep breaths while my parents filled the tank – this no doubt\u00a0explains a lot – but as a mature, responsible adult, I’ve traded the old gasoline habit for a quince on the counter, when seasonally feasible.<\/p>\n That said, if you can<\/em> find a quince, when you’ve had enough of huffing it, I might recommend that you\u00a0poach it.<\/p>\n There are lots of ways to eat quince: roasted, cooked down into jam or jelly or the sweet-savory paste called membrillo<\/a>, grated into an apple pie, baked into a tarte Tatin<\/a>, and whatnot. I keep meaning to try that tarte Tatin. But mostly, when I come across quince, I poach it. I cook it slowly on the stovetop until it softens into a pool of its own syrup and then eat it the next morning for breakfast, with whole-milk plain yogurt. And then again as a snack around eleven. And then I eat it again later in the day, for\u00a0dessert, on top of\u00a0ice cream or a slice of pound cake. Poached quince lasts for a good week in the refrigerator, and the longer it marinates in its poaching syrup, the prettier it gets. If you’ve\u00a0cooked it in\u00a0a poaching liquid sweetened with sugar<\/a>, it will get\u00a0redder as it sits. If your poaching liquid is sweetened with maple syrup, it’ll go a handsome\u00a0ruddy brown, the color of a caramelized apple.<\/p>\n Poaching quince doesn’t really require a recipe, but my favorite version comes from a new-ish book called The New Sugar and Spice<\/a><\/em>, by Samantha Seneviratne<\/a>, who, incidentally, I met once in the summer of 2005 in our mutual friend Amy Leo’s backyard in New Jersey, though I haven’t seen her since. Hi, Sam! \u00a0I love your book!<\/p>\n Her\u00a0version is simple and well considered: nothing but water, maple syrup, salt, and six green cardamom pods, cracked open under the side of a knife. Actually, I shouldn’t lie: I was wary of using that full\u00a0half-dozen pods of cardamom. The flavor of quince is so floral, I don’t like to screw with it. I doesn’t need<\/em> anything.\u00a0But Sam was right. Poached quince with maple and cardamom is How I Will Henceforth Do Quince:\u00a0delicate, fragrant, the flavor of the fruit not covered up but\u00a0boosted.<\/p>\n\n<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Maple-Poached Quince<\/h2>\n
Adapted from The New Sugar and Spice<\/a><\/i>, by Samantha Seneviratne<\/h3> \n \n <\/header>\n\n