Category Archives: Autumn

compote de pommes two ways{ffwd}

Apples in the Food Mill

I love applesauce in all of its forms. Smooth, chunky, unsweetened, sweet, spiced, plain. I don’t think I’ve ever met an applesauce I didn’t enjoy. That means I was excited about this week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie, Compote de Pommes Two Ways, which is the French way of saying applesauce with two options for the final products, thin or ultra-thick.

I consider myself to be a frugal cook. I don’t mean I’m a cheap cook. I have no problem buying the best quality ingredients or indulging in an unusual ingredient. I just mean I like to make the most of my ingredients. This often means I try to do “nose-to-tail” cooking with whatever I can, including fruits and vegetables. I loved that this recipe started with chopped-up whole apples, skin, cores, seeds, and all. In fact, when I make an apple-intensive dessert like apple crisp, I often make applesauce from the skins and cores alone. It’s amazing how much applesauce the scraps yield.

Last weekend, I made a couple of apple pies for a fundraising event for the new Community Farm I’m involved with. I dutifully saved the peels and cores for applesauce. I also ended up with a few cups of extra sliced apples that had already been tossed with sugar and spices.

When I was ready to make my Compote de Pommes, it occurred to me that rather than weighing out whole apples from the drawer, I should see how much apple parts were leftover from the pie making project. Lo and behold, I had about the two pounds the compote started with. So, that’s what I used as my base.

Apple Scraps

The apple cooks with a little brown sugar and a small amount of water until the apple is mashably tender. Then everything takes a trip through the food mill. For way #1, you can season this “first press” and call it a day.

After the first cook

I was more intrigued by way #2 where the applesauce cooks down further to because thick and spreadable. You can do this stovetop, but I chose the oven option, placing the pot in a low oven and stirring it every 10 minutes until it reached the desired consistency. After about 50 minutes, it was bedtime, so I decided it was thick enough. If I’d had the time and patience that evening, it could have cooked for even longer.

Finally, the compote de pommes can be sweetened to taste (mine didn’t need it), a generous spoonful of vanilla extract, and a small chunk of butter. I’ve never had applesauce flavored with vanilla, but it was a happy discovery!

Dorie gave various suggestions for serving the compote de pommes. I found it delicious slightly warm, just eaten straight from a bowl. I also remembered making a French Apple Tart earlier this year when I was participating in Tuesdays with Dorie. This is a simple construction of a pastry shell topped with thick applesauce and sliced apples brushed with butter and sprinkled with sugar. I had some extra pastry dough in the fridge from the pie making, enough to make a 9-inch tart shell, so that’s what I did. I enjoyed it as much this time as when I made it originally.

French Apple Tart

In my book (Howard wouldn’t try it), I’m declaring Compote de Pommes a winner this week! To see what the other Doristas thought, follow their links here. I can’t find the recipe online and we don’t post recipes that aren’t already out there, but We don’t post the recipes, but you can find it in Dorie Greenspan’s book Around My French Table.

hurry-up-and-wait roast chicken {ffwd}

HUAWRoastChicken

In Around My French Table (AMFT), Dorie Greenspan includes several different ways to roast a chicken. This week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie, Hurry-up-and-Wait Roast Chicken, offers yet another technique. In this case, you cook the chicken in a very hot oven (the hurry up part) for just under an hour. Then, you allow the chicken to set in a yoga-like pose for about 15 minutes as it reabsorbs the juices (the wait part).

(I forgot to take photos after the initial shot, so I don’t have much visual on offer this week.)

I started with a layer of potato, sliced carrots, and fresh herbs in the bottom of my Le Creuset Dutch oven so the vegetables could roast in the chicken’s juices and provide the dinner’s side. The tricky part of this recipe is flipping the hot chicken from side to side, and later upside down, using various kitchen utensils. I started with the recommended pancake turners on the outside of the bird, switched to a large spoon stuck inside the bird, and finally settled on using paper towels for the best control. If I had silicon mitts, I am sure that would have worked better.

I had some trouble with the timing of cooking the chicken. After the 50 minute roast, the internal temperature was still 20 degrees cooler than the USDA recommended temperature, so I baked it for another 10 minutes. Also, this chicken didn’t seem to have the lovely browned skin that I prefer on roast chicken. Maybe it’s because I used a high-sided Dutch oven rather than a skillet or roasting pan, causing some steaming action. Yet when I make my all-time favorite recipe from AMFT, the Lazy Person’s Chicken, I use the same pot. Not sure what’s up with that.

I will say that the bird was extremely moist, more than most roast chickens I have made. I’ll chalk that up to the cooking technique. However, I still prefer the Lazy Person’s Chicken, which will remain my go-to roast chicken recipe for the foreseeable future.

In addition to the roasted vegetables in the pot, I also roasted dumpling squash slices on a separate pan. All in all, it was the perfect comfort food as fall settles in for a while. It was also the perfect sustenance for watching Game 6 of the World Series, which went way past my bedtime. It was worth staying up. The Red Sox clinched the championship at home, winning the title for the 3rd time in 10 years. Very exciting! (No apologies offered to the Yankee fans among my friends.)

To see what other Doristas thought of this recipe, check out their posts here.