Quinces, Eliot Hodgkin, 1969 |
An expert was consulted. Their lovely scent wafted from the kitchen as I baked them, following Sue's advice. (Thanks, Sue.)
Then I made the quince tort dating back to 1662 from this fascinating book. Here's the original.
Quinces, Parmesan cheese, marzipan scented with orange-flower water, mixed together and baked in puff pastry. (I own up. It did have a soggy bottom.)
The technical challenge, of course, is guessing 17th century oven temperature/timing.
I thought it would be sickly-sweet but it was quite fresh and light. I'd make it again if I could get hold of more quinces.
And it was certainly a talking point.
The serving suggestion of a puff pastry eagle's head stuffed with marzipan and quince is sadly beyond my skills as a pastrychef.
I'd feel mortified serving up an eagle's head with a soggy bottom.
4 comments:
Your quince tort sounds delightful with or without its soggy bottom. I'm glad you didn't try the eagle's head though. Love the painting too.
I know my limits, Gina!
That sounds lovely, Sue. I'd like to try quince sweetmeats, too - but I think I've probably had my share of quinces for this year.
I think they should suggest it for a technical challenge on Bake Off next year. How I am missing Simon. He was such a tonic. Thank you for the pointer.
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