Thursday, May 13, 2010

Plums, a good fruit a tasty fruit


Plums
By
Michael O’Meara
Oscars Bistro Galway


The food authority Waverly Root cites the plum as “one of the worlds most luscious fruits”. Indeed when juicy and ripe a fresh plum is a thing of culinary perfection. Plums are incredibly versatile and make the most stunning compotes which can be used as a base for tasty sauces, ice-creams or accompaniments to both sweet and savoury foods. Duck roasted and served with plum sauce, plum compote with fresh vanilla ice-cream or tangy plum compote served with a strong blue cheese, heaven.
There are a great many varieties of plum available and the colours of the plum can be as stunning as the taste of the fruit, ranging from deep blue through to bright purple and the all the way to vibrant yellow. Plums are closely related to cherries, so close in fact that a cherry could almost be categorised as a small plum.
Plums have been cultivated for thousands of years but virtually all the plums we see today are the result of crossing three species being the Euoropean plum (P. domestica), American plum (P.americana) and Japanese plum (P.salicina). It should also be noted the Japanese plum is originally a native of China, but was improved by the Japanese. The name plum in the Middle Ages was often a source of confusion as the plums was the name donated to almost all dried fruit, this included raisins, hence the name plum pudding which we nowadays call Christmas pudding.

To make a tasty plum pie simply follow the recipe below

For the filling

1 kg ripe plums with the stones removed and chopped into medium sized chunks
400 grams granulated sugar
Place the plums and sugar into a thick based pot and allow to gently stew until very tender. Place aside and allow cool.


Short crust pastry
Sift 225gram plain flour into a bowl and stir in a pinch of salt.
Add 50gram chilled butter and 50gram lard cut into small pieces.
Lightly rub into the flour until you gain a breadcrumb like texture.
Sprinkle 3 tablespoons of cold water over the mixture then use a tablespoon to mix the mixture.
The mixture will form into clumps; press these together by hand to form a ball.
Allow the pastry to chill for at least 30 minutes
Butter and then lightly flour a baking flan tin.
Roll out the pasty and line the flan tin with the pastry then bake blind for 10 minutes in the oven at 180°C. Fill the pastry with the plum compote.

For a crumble topping to the pie
50g flour
25g butter
25g brown sugar
Blend ingredients together in a food processor and spread over the top of the pie and bake for about 10 minutes or till golden in a moderately hot oven.
Serve with vanilla ice-cream and enjoy.

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