Brussels Sprouts With Kumquats And Smoked Salt
- 1/4 cup bacon fat
- 1 pound brussels sprouts, sliced lengthwise into thirds
- 5 tablespoons kumquat marmalade (recipe below)
- 2 large pinches smoked sea salt
- 2 1/4 pounds Eureka or Lisbon lemons, cut into eighths
- 2 1/4 pounds tart kumquats (such as Nagami), seeded and quartered
- 4 1/2 pounds white cane sugar
- 1/4 - 1/2 cup strained freshly squeezed Lisbon or Eureka lemon juice
- Place the lemon eighths in a nonreactive saucepan where they will fit snugly in a single layer.
- Add enough cold water for the fruit to bob freely.
- Cover tightly and let rest overnight at room temperature.
- Prepare the cooked lemon juice: Bring the lemon eighths to a boil over high heat, then lower the heat to medium.
- Cook the fruit at a lively simmer, covered, for 2 to 3 hours, or until lemons are very soft and the liquid has become slightly syrupy.
- As the lemons cook, press down on them gently with a spoon every 30 minutes or so, adding a little more water if needed.
- The water level should stay consistently high enough for the fruit to remain submerged and float freely as it cooks.
- When the lemons are finished cooking, strain their juice by pouring the hot fruit and liquid into a medium strainer or colander suspended over a heatproof storage container or nonreactive saucepan.
- Cover the entire setup well with plastic wrap and let drip overnight at room temperature.
- Meanwhile, prepare the kumquats: Place the kumquat quarters in a wide stainless steel kettle and add cold water to reach 1 inch above the tops.
- Cover tightly and let rest overnight at room temperature.
- Place a saucer with 5 metal teaspoons in a flat place in your freezer for testing the marmalade later.
- Bring the pan with the kumquats to a boil over high heat, then decrease the heat to medium and cook, uncovered, at a lively simmer until the fruit is tender, 15 to 30 minutes.
- Remove the plastic wrap from the lemon eighths and their juice and discard the lemons.
- Strain the juice well through a very fine-mesh sieve to remove any lingering solids.
- In a large bowl, combine the sugar, cooked lemon juice, kumquats and their liquid, and 1/4 cup of the fresh lemon juice.
- Stir well.
- Dip a small spoon into the syrupy liquid and taste the liquid.
- If you do not detect a bright, tart lemon flavor, cautiously add a bit more lemon juice, stirring and tasting as you go, until you can just taste the tartness and lemon flavor of the juice in the mixture.
- Once you have reached this point, the mixture is ready to cook.
- Transfer the mixture to an 11- or 12-quart copper preserving pan or wide nonreactive kettle.
- Bring the mixture to a boil over high heat.
- Cook at a rapid boil until the setting point is reached; this will take a minimum of 25 minutes but may take longer, depending on your individual stove and pan.
- Initially, the mixture will bubble gently for several minutes; then, as more moisture cooks out of it and the sugar concentration increases, it will begin foaming.
- Do not stir it at all during the initial bubbling; then, once it starts to foam, stir it gently every few minutes with a heatproof rubber spatula.
- As it gets close to being done, stir it frequently to prevent burning, loewring the heat a tiny bit if needed.
- The marmalade is ready for testing when its color darkens slightly and its bubbles become very small.
- To test the marmalade for doneness, remove it from heat and carefully transfer a small representative half-spoonful to one of your frozen spoons.
- It should look shiny, with tiny bubbles throughout.
- Place the spoon back in the freezer for 3 to 4 minutes, then remove and carefully feel the underside of the spoon.
- It should be neither warm nor cold; if still warm, return it to the freezer for a moment.
- Tilt the spoon vertically to see whether the marmalade runs; if it does not run, and if its top layer has thickened to a jelly consistency, it is done.
- If it runs, cook it for another few minutes, stirring, and test again as needed.
- Turn off the heat but do not stir.
- Using a stainless steel spoon, skim off any surface foam and discard.
- Pour the marmalade into sterilized jars.
- This recipe yields 2 1/2 quarts.
bacon fat, brussels sprouts, kumquat marmalade, salt, lemons, tart kumquats, white cane sugar, lemon juice
Taken from www.foodrepublic.com/recipes/brussels-sprouts-with-kumquats-and-smoked-salt-recipe/ (may not work)