Caramel Apple Crumble

caramel crumble

Caramel Apple Crumble – naughty and very nice

Apple crumble – a recipe so basic, so very right, so very comforting served with dollops of custard that to mess with it seems a bit silly.  Yet unlike many classics it does react brilliantly to a touch of “poshing up”– cranberries & orange, lemon and fresh ginger, almonds, hazelnuts and oats on top and so on.  All good wholesome stuff. But this new dalliance, the addition of silky sinful caramel takes apple crumble in a much sexier direction (no surprise the inspiration was the gallic “tarte tatin”). Unctuous caramelly apples gooey and sticky, the caramel oozing over the edges just a little bit to tempt and titivate your taste buds and mouthfuls of crunchy crumble topping. We are talking seduction dessert here not what your grandmother would have put on the kitchen table.

So lets start with caramel. We want a dark and interesting number here not an insipid pale apology. Making caramel is dangerous! But very very simple and anybody can do it. (I told you this was sexy).  You need a heavy deep pan, some confidence, belief in your senses and a sink or large plastic bowl filled with cold water (both to plunge the base of the pan in to halt the cooking process and to immerse your hands should the caramel spit and burn you).

Pour the caramel into the base of your chosen receptacle – precious little ramekins or a big deep pie dish. Here you want a bit more than if making a crème caramel so a very generous coating indeed or if you are into measurements between 0.5 and 1cm of caramel.  It will go hard as it cools (an ooh erhhh moment) and in fact you can leave it a couple of days in advance and it will be just fine.  Then just chop up some apples (tart ones naturally) and place them higgledy piggledy in your dish. No need to add any sugar as you have the caramel but a dusting of ground cloves and cinnamon helps. Cover with a thin layer of crumble – we want fruit with a layer of crumble not crumble stodge with some lonely fruit at the bottom.

Bake at 180C until the crumble is just golden brown (approx 25 minutes depending on your oven) and eat when warm, not direct from the oven unless you want to visit the local burns unit. I drink a good dessert wine with this but feel free to over indulge with whatever cream, custard or liqueur takes your fancy.

Caramel Sauce

Ingredients

200g  sugar
85 g very good salted butter cubed min 82% fat

250ml heavy cream / double cream (“smantana dulce”)

How To

Melt the sugar over medium to moderately high heat in your large pan. Don’t touch it too much as it can crystallize. Tilt the pan around so it cooks and browns and liquefies evenly. It needs to be a dark coppery colour but not smoking and burning.

Tip in the butter and give a quick stir to make sure it is incorporated

Switch off the heat. Plunge the base of the pan into the cold water momentarily.

Whisk in the cream (still off the heat but there will be enough residual heat and it may even froth and foam) until you have a smooth creamy consistency sauce.

This sauce thickens and when reheated gently becomes molten. To make it liquid again just place the pan on a gentle heat or microwave in a glass jar on medium until it is a pouring consistency.

Classic Crumble

200g flour

100g butter 82% cold and cubed (I once made with Transylvanian “untura” but that is a different story)

100g sugar

500g apples peeled and cored either diced or cut into slices.  Juice of one lemon squeezed over and mixed around to prevent discoloration

How To

Crumble is child’s play – literally – small fingers learning to rub cold butter, flour and sugar together until an edible sand is created is one of the first lessons of cooking…well at least where I am from.

If you want to be a traditionalist or like getting your hands dirty or just don’t own a load of gizmos then gently rub the ingredients together (I sometimes use a knife to start the process and to keep things cool) until you have sandy crumbs. If you own a food mixer then do this with the “K “ beater attachment (this is how I usually make it) or (a new discovery) blend in a food processor on pulse setting taking care not to over blend and create a cookie dough. The crumble mix freezes brilliantly and its worth making extra to always have something to throw over fruit and create an instant dessert with.

For classic apple crumble place a generous amount of fruit in the individual ramekins or a large deep dish.  You can squeeze lemon or orange juice over as this helps the apple keep its colour but no extra liquid is required.  Spoon over the crumble and “pat down” so that the fruit is just covered in a thin layer.  Cook for 25-35 minutes until the crumble is a golden brown and eat with custard or sour cream (“smantana”).

 

Rosehip Jam

 

IMG_2802

I remember foraging for rosehips in my Mum’s hippy phase (along with shaggy ink cap mushrooms, blackberries and all manner of hedgerow stuff with Richard Mabey’s “Food for Free” as our guide).  My Mum made rosehip syrup to imbue us all with giant quantities of Vitamin C. It fermented so Mum added brandy to halt the fermentation process.  Naturally she still made us drink it…which could explain a lot. I’ve never made the rosehip jam which is a store cupboard staple in Romania so I was super excited to be offered five litres of fresh rosehip paste to play with.

IMG_2787The fresh paste was way sweeter than I expected so I decided to add some lemons and lemon zest. I kind of followed my recipe for quince paste/ redcurrant jam where I add an equal amount of sugar to the fruit pulp or I make a 40:60 ratio.  Here I combined 2.5kgs of fruit paste with 2kgs of sugar so in fact that’s roughly 45:55 ratio.  It was easy to cook up and the colour is a lovely rusty red.  Cant wait to use it in IMG_2792my Almond & Sherry Tart.  A small tip: my grandmother always insisted that to make good jam you need to make small quantities and she was
right.  Unless you have a classic copper jam pan you risk having a small surface area for rapid boiling and jam that is “too deep”.  Then the jam doesn’t set fast and you also risk having a temperature differential between the top of the jam and the base so your jam burns.  So like many things in life the best come in small packages.


IMG_2788Ingredients

Made approx 18 medium jars

2.5kgs rosehip paste

2.0kgs sugar

Juice and zest of 2 lemons

 Gadgets & Gizmos: Just your best quality saucepan with the thickest base possible and a sharp wooden palette to check the jam is not sticking.

Clean jars in the oven at 100C and lids soaked in bicarbonate of soda

How To

  • Combine the paste and the sugar and the lemon juice and either leave overnight for the sugar to dissolve or put on a low flame until the sugar is fully dissolved
  • Place a few saucers in the freezer
  • IMG_2790Put the jam on the highest flame until it achieves a “rolling boil”. This means that its really boiling fast and can spit extremely hot ham globules so really be careful
  • After seven minutes do your first test with a small amount of jam on a frozen plate – does it stop “running”? does it wrinkle when you push it with a finger? If no boil a little longer until this point is reached, if yes switch off the flame
  • Now add the lemon zest and stir through carefully
  • IMG_2793Pour the jam into the hot jars and put the lids on as fast as you can. It pays to have a friend around. When you are sure the lids are on tight take a tea towel (in case you have a leak and boiling jam spills over your hands) and carefully and gently invert each jar and return to standing.  This “inversion” sterilizes the air gap and is very important.

Leave to cool and enjoy the “popping” sound as the jar lids contract!

 

Redcurrant Crumble

This week I was super excited to see my favorite berries of the season on sale in Matache – redcurrants or “coacaze rosii”. Memories flooded back of last year’s “mouli marathon” where I made seedless redcurrant jam using David Lebovitz’ recipe as a guide. I briefly cooked the fruit and made a puree by passing them through a hand food mill. I was left with an iridescent red gloop to be made into jam and a large pile of pips and pulp.

Having read up on the power of fruit acids to cleanse and renew skin, I resourcefully decided to use the seedy leftovers as a bath time scrub. As with many things in life, sometimes the idea and the execution are very different things. For those of you who want to try this at home, I can say that the exfoliating sensation and the kind of fruity fresh smell were good. Not so good, however, was dying my skin bright red.

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