The Black Jewels Of Fall - Basic Chesnuts Simmered In Their Inner Skins
- 1 kg with their shells on Chestnuts
- 500 grams Sugar
- 15 grams - or 30 grams if the inner skins are thick Bicarbonate of soda
- Wash the chestnuts lightly, and discard any that have holes in them.
- Put the chestnuts in an enamelled or stainless pot with plenty of water.
- Discard any chestnuts that float to the surface too.
- If you cover the chestnuts with water in the pot, bring to a boil and simmer for 5 to 10 minutes, they'll become easier to peel.
- You can skip this step though.
- Good chestnuts have thin shells so be careful.
- Cut in between the smooth part and the rough textured part on the bottom of the chestnut, then peel off towards the top.
- Here is a peeled chestnut.
- They always have one thick fiber, but that will be dealt with later so don't worry about it now.
- Soak the chestnuts in water after they are peeled.
- If they dry out they may split easily.
- Put the chestnuts in a pot with enough water to cover plus 5 to 10 g of bicarbonate of soda, and heat.
- When the pot comes to a boil, lower the heat to low-medium, or enough so that the chestnuts don't dance around in the water.
- Some foamy scum will rise to the surface - skim if off immediately.
- After the chestnuts are simmered, pour off the water gently so as not to break up the chestnuts (you can use a colander for this for just the first round) and rinse under running water.
- Wash out the pot at this time too.
- Take each chestnut in your hand, and remove the thick fiber gently with a toothpick or something, and rub off any fine fibers gently with your fingers.
- If you skip this step the chestnuts will retain their tannic quality, so do this carefully.
- Repeat steps 5 to 8 three times, always handling the chestnuts gently.
- Then add water only to the chestnuts, bring to a boil and simmer gently for 5 minutes or so to remove the bicarbonate of soda taste.
- Do this 1 to 2 times.
- Put the chestnuts from Step 9 in a pot with enough water to cover t hem.
- Turn on the heat, and add the sugar in 2 to 3 batches.
- Bring to a boil, cover with a piece of kitchen parchment paper to act as a drop lid or otoshibuta, and simmer over low heat for about 20 minutes.
- Leave the chestnuts to cool down in the pot, and they're done.
- To give the chestnuts a shine, just take them out and simmer the syrup only to reduce it.
- Or to do this even more easily, just add some premade sugar syrup.
- You can easily freeze the chestnuts, too.
- You will always have some broken or malformed chestnuts!
- See this recipe for making an authentic chestnut cream with them..
chestnuts, sugar, bicarbonate
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/172160-the-black-jewels-of-fall-basic-chesnuts-simmered-in-their-inner-skins (may not work)