Pears Poached in Gewurztraminer with Tahitian Vanilla and Ginger
- 1 bottle (750 ml.) good-quality Gewurztraminer wine
- 1 cup water, preferably filtered or still spring water
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 plump Tahitian vanilla bean, split lengthwise
- One (1 1/2-inch) piece fresh ginger root, peeled and sliced in 1/4-inch thick slices
- 2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
- 6 medium-sized, ripe but firm pears, such as Bartlett or Anjou; or 10 to 12 small firm dessert pears, such as Sugar, Seckel or Forelle
- Vanilla Bean Ice Cream, to serve
- In a heavy-bottomed 2-quart saucepan just large enough to hold the pears with about 2 inches of headspace to spare, combine the wine, water and sugar.
- Bring the mixture to the boil, stirring until the sugar dissolves.
- Remove the syrup from the heat and add the vanilla bean, ginger slices and lemon juice.
- Peel the pears, removing the skin as thinly as possible, leaving the stems intact.
- Follow the gentle curves of the pears as you peel them so they retain their beautiful shape.
- Add the pears all at once to the pot of syrup and press a small, clean dishcloth directly onto the surface of the mixture, soaking the cloth.
- Place a circle of parchment paper onto the cloth; this will prevent the pears from poaching unevenly or drying out on one side.
- (If you find the pears are still floating, you can place a little plate or saucer onto the cloth to weigh them down.
- The trick is to keep the fruit under the syrup, without having it rest on the bottom of the pot!
- Do your best; I have found one side plate that is the perfect size and weight-heavy enough to hold the fruit under, but not so heavy that the pears are squashed against the bottom.
- Experiment!
- Somewhere in your kitchen is the ideal dish!)
- Return the pot to the element over medium-low heat and slowly bring the syrup to a bare simmer.
- Watch closely: you dont want the mixture to boil too vigorously at any point, or the fruit will cook too quickly and begin to break down in the syrup.
- Reduce the heat slightly and keep the syrup just below the simmer.
- Tiny bubbles should dance up around the pears and just break the surface.
- Too low is better than too high a heat; the pears may take a little longer to poach, but will remain intact and tender.
- Poach the fruit until the tip of a very sharp knife slips in and out easily.
- Let the pears cool in their syrup, then refrigerate until needed.
- If the pears are extremely soft, carefully remove them from the syrup into a shallow container and refrigerate until cool.
- Cool the syrup separately, then pour it over the pears and refrigerate together until needed.
- (The pears can be poached up to 4 days ahead of time and refrigerated, submerged in their syrup.)
- To serve, remove the fruit from the refrigerator about I hour before you plan to serve them.
- Pare off a little slice from the bottom of each pear to create a flat plane for the fruit to stand on and place one in each of 6 shallow dessert bowls.
- Spoon some of the syrup over top and accompany with a scoop of Vanilla Bean Ice Cream and a flavourful biscuit.
- Creme anglaise also makes a lovely accompaniment.
wine, water, sugar, vanilla bean, ginger root, freshly squeezed lemon juice, bartlett, vanilla
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/pears-poached-in-gewurztraminer-with-tahitian-vanilla-and-ginger (may not work)