Search blog.co.uk

Archives for: April 2006, 09

Warm Fruit Salad (serves 4-6) © Kevin Ashton 2005

by WannabeTVChef @ 2006-04-09 - 00:53:02

Warm Fruit Salad

Sometimes a fresh fruit salad can be a great finish to a big meal, but there is a little more to it than chopping it up. Taking time in the way you cut up the fresh fruit will have a big impact on the appearance. In keeping the fruit in larger pieces it becomes possible to arrange the fruit rather than just serve it. Making stock syrup for it helps to slow down the oxidation and keep in the flavours. It’s interesting and different to serve a fruit salad warm, though you can also serve this cold if you wish.

200 grams castor sugar
1 vanilla pod
250 ml cold water
peel of 1 lemon
peel 1 orange
1 ripe pineapple
12 Fresh lychees
! ripe mango
1 small punnet blackberries
2 large ripe nectarines or peaches
passion fruit sorbet

1. Put the sugar, water and vanilla pod into a stainless steel saucepan and bring to a boil,then turn the heat to low.
2. Using a very sharp knife or peeler peel the orange and the lemon, trying to make sure you peel only the skin and not the white pith.
3. Add the peel to the syrup and simmer for 3-4 more minutes, then cool.
4. Peel the pineapple well then cut in half lengthwise and into quarters if the pineapple is large.
5. Using a corer if you have one, cut out the woody centre from the pineapple, then cut the pineapple into 1/4 inch thick slices.
6. Peel and cut the mango into slices rather than dice... so you can arrange the fingers in a fan shape.
7. Lychees peel relatively easily if ripe, just try to remove the skin without damaging the flesh.
8. Cut the nectarines in half and carefully remove the stones. Then cut into similar slices like the mango (peel them before slicing if you wish).
9. Preheat oven 120 C (gas mark 1) then divide and arrange the fruit (except the blackberries) onto large dessert plates or shallow pasta bowls. Take your time so you can arrange the fruit nicely. *If you wish you could do this before your dinner guests arrive and cling wrap the plates.
10. Discard the citrus peel from the stock syrup, cut the vanilla pods lengthwise then each half into 2 and keep to decorate with.
11. Carefully place the dessert plates into the oven for 4-5 minutes & reheat the stock syrup until warm.

To serve
Remove the desserts from the oven adding 4-5 blackberries in a neat stack on each plate then pour over about 2 Tbsp of the syrup on each plate, making sure all of the fruit is covered. Decorate with the vanilla pod and serve immediately, offering the cold sorbet on the side.

Chef’s Tips
The point of this dish is the contrast between the warm ripe fruits and sharp refreshing flavour of the passion fruit sorbet. If you can’t find passion fruit sorbet then use lemon and spoon a little fresh passion fruit on top.
If you prefer you could serve it with a good quality vanilla ice cream (offered on the side). It’s paramount that you buy the pineapple, mango, lychees and peaches at least 3-4 days before hand to give them chance to ripen up.

Warm Fruit Salad (serves 4-6) © Kevin Ashton 2005

Don't forget-If you live in the Midlands (UK) you can follow my weekly recipe column in the Sunday Mercury

Just an Old Tart

by WannabeTVChef @ 2006-04-09 - 00:35:54

First let me take a moment to thank everyone who has taken up my invitation and has joined this blog. This has made my decision easier…. you see I had run out of space having quickly used my 10megabytes for pictures. Should I remove earlier posts to make room or throw caution to the wind and turn pro?

I have decided to turn pro (tart) so I can continue to post decent sized photos of my recipes. I will even try with Google adsense and find what that is all about.

As I have mentioned before although I’m a good chef I’m a novice blogger but I do have a strong desire to make this blog worth visiting. Thanks again for all your kind wishes,I will answer all the emails …ASAP.
I will be posting a recipe in an hour or so.