swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower

Quince is one of those things I’d seen referenced in historical literature, but had never encountered in person. Although Wikipedia tells me it’s eaten fairly regularly in some parts of Europe, and there’s absolutely nothing preventing it being grown in the U.S., you’re not going to find it at your average supermarket here.

I suspect that’s in part because you mostly can’t snack on it raw, the way you can with apples and pears and oranges and bananas and all the other things commonly found in the produce section. You either have to cook it, or you have to wait for it to blet — that is, to go overripe and sort of (but not exactly) rotten. The same is true of medlars, another fruit we’ve largely forgotten. Also some varieties of persimmons; I suspect the one time I tried to eat ripe persimmon I may have been eating the wrong kind, as I found it unpleasantly astringent. But those I’m seeing around more these days — though still not at the supermarket. Persimmon trees aren’t uncommon in northern California, so not only the farmers’ market but possibly one’s neighbors may have their fruit on offer.

But if waiting for fruit to sort of but not exactly rot isn’t your idea of an appetizing approach, there’s always cooking. Which is why quince has come into my life: one stall at our farmers’ market sells it, and last year my husband (who makes jam) ventured to make quince paste. It’s very strong-tasting stuff — but if you pair it with manchego cheese (itself quite strong-tasting), a strange alchemy happens and you wind up with something amazing.

All well and good. But this year he wound up with a few extra quinces, not quite enough to make another batch of paste. So instead he decided to make quince-and-apple pie for Thanksgiving. It’s quite nice! Quinces are related to apples anyway, and they combine well. Which is good when your husband decides he’s got too much quince for one pie, but enough apple to fill it out and make two pies.

. . . during the Thanksgiving when your sister-in-law already has a store-bought apple pie and a small cherry pie, and is making a pumpkin pie. O_O Five pies (well, four and a half) for nine people. Um.

There are, of course, other things one can do with quince. Like poach them in sugar water with some spices. One might possibly suggest to one’s husband that this would have been more sensible than making a second quince-and-apple pie. One might not quite buy one’s husband’s argument that you really want larger chunks of quince for that, and he’d already sliced it all thin, so there was nothing to be done but make a second pie.

But hey. There’s always next year. And maybe I’ll find some medlars for him to poach instead.

Date: 2019-11-30 07:47 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
From: [personal profile] sovay
Quince is one of those things I’d seen referenced in historical literature, but had never encountered in person.

My parents have a quince tree in their backyard. They've never done anything with the fruit, mostly because it would require a level of maintenance that neither of them cares that much about, but it's there every year. The times we've cooked with quince, we've bought them from our local farmstand, which has the same climate but people who don't mind pruning and spraying.

I look forward to the medlar experiment next year!

Date: 2019-11-30 07:50 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
From: [personal profile] sovay
But we're still able to get a certain amount of usable fruit from it, especially for purposes like apple butter where you can readily cut out the bits that pests have gotten at.

That's a really nice thing to have access to.

(The quinces all seem to get eaten by wasps or birds or squirrels, and you know, if it makes them happy?)

Date: 2019-11-30 08:00 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
From: [personal profile] sovay
It's honestly probably a little troubling that we don't lose more fruit to wildlife.

I am surprised to hear the sour cherries don't suffer more from birds, and I have no suggestions whatsoever on the pith-eater except that if you ever find out what it is, I'd love to know. (I am a person who used to eat raw lemons like other citrus fruit until a dentist told me to stop for my teeth, but my feelings about the edibility of lemon zest mostly require baking.) How many fruit trees do you have?

Date: 2019-11-30 08:19 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
From: [personal profile] sovay
We've got four

That's really cool.

It is roughly my height and in 2016 it produced approximately two dozen cherries; in 2019 it produced approximately a gallon. It is ambitious to grow up to be a ~real tree~.

Tell it I'm rooting for it!

Date: 2019-12-01 08:49 am (UTC)
brooksmoses: (Default)
From: [personal profile] brooksmoses
When I was growing up, we had a sour-cherry tree that had definitely grown up to be a real tree. The trunk was about two feet in diameter, the spread was around 40 feet, and we had a treehouse in it. It produced uncountable gallons of cherries; we had plenty, the birds had plenty, the ground had more than plenty.

Eventually it got eaten up too badly by carpenter ants -- the trunk, not the cherries -- and fell over -- luckily not on anything, as far as I know (I was off in grad school at the time), but even so, it was rather a loss.

I was always sad that store-bought cherries were never the same as the ones from my childhood. And then about a year and a half ago I happened across a basket of fresh sour cherries at Milk Pail Market, and bought them, and had this epiphany of oh that's what that cherry tree was on top of the bliss of having those cherries for the first time in two decades.

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