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Dried-Fruit Compote

By , from the Deborah Madison collection
Serves 6 to 8

This recipe is from Deborah Madison’s forthcoming book, Seasonal Fruit Desserts, due out in spring 2010.

Introduction

How long it takes for your fruit to become plump and soft has to do with how dry it is. The current season’s dried fruits usually cook more quickly than fruits you’ve had sitting around for a year or more, but eventually, they too will revive, soften, and plump up.

Ingredients

¾ cup honey or 1 cup sugar
½ vanilla bean, halved lengthwise
2 to 3 cups dried fruit, such as pears, nectarines, peaches, apricots, cherries, pluots, raisins, etc.

Steps

  1. Combine 3 cups water and the honey or sugar in a saucepan large enough to hold the fruit. Bring to a boil and stir to dissolve the sugar if using. Scrape the seeds of the vanilla bean into the syrup, then add the pods.
  2. Add the fruit, reduce the heat to low, and cook, covered, until soft, about 20 minutes, or longer, if necessary. When the fruit is tender, remove it with a spoon to a bowl, leaving any pieces that need more cooking to simmer until done.
  3. Return the cooking liquid to the heat and simmer until syrupy and covered with bubbles, about five minutes, then pour it over the fruit. Serve chilled.

Notes

Variations: Replace half the water with a sweet white wine, such as a Riesling. (Red wines are good too, but they obscure the colors of the fruit.) Add a cinnamon stick, 2 cloves, cardamom seeds, toasted peppercorns, and the like to the liquid as the fruit is poaching.

Related article: Fruity winter desserts; article: An elegant dried-fruit compote

This content is from the Deborah Madison collection.

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1. by rajani@eatwritethink on Jan 12, 2010 at 9:24 PM PST

yum it looks great!!! am thinking could i use any syrup?? i have some date syrup that needs to be used up!

2. by Fasenfest on Jan 18, 2010 at 5:46 AM PST

My mother used to make this regularly for my dad. Just a package of mixed dried fruit, a little boiling water over it, a piece of lemon rind -- all in a jar, sit overnight or longer in the fridge and serve. No sugar, no nothing. The syrup would come from the fruit itself and if you are really going old school you would serve it with cottage cheese so, as my people liked to say, you would be “regular”. If you collect and dry local fruit so much the better.

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