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Making More {Recipe: Apple Cinnamon Syrup}

The about a month ago NPR reported that despite the recession, people are actually spending more money. (A fact backed up by our record $52 billion spending over this Thanksgiving weekend.) Although it doesn’t make financial sense, I can understand the desire. In the United States most of us are raised on a culture of plenty, and the idea of “going without” is unfamiliar and strange. Anyone who has ever worked on debt reduction knows the reactions from friends often reveals a lack of desire to get spending under control, no matter how much they praise your efforts.

Now that I’m not working for a paycheck full-time (taking care of my son and the household are certainly full-time jobs, though I only get paid in snuggles and zrbbts) the budget falls even more on my shoulders. I’ve been informally in charge of it for years, but now I’m more conscious of every single penny.

I’ve always been a spender at heart – I started working when I was 14 and yet saved only about $500 for college – but somewhere in there I have a nerdy, thrifty mind. This might be where my canning obsession came from. Having canned for a few years now, I know what we eat and what we don’t. Predictably we blow through tomato-based products, but jam? Not so much. Both the little and big guy love peanut butter and jelly/jam sandwiches, but it would take daily sandwiches and a bigger family to work through the stash that I keep replenishing. Two years ago I made apple butter from Cameos we picked out near Fredericksburg, and it took a year and a half to work through it all. Yet I found myself again making apple butter this year – after all, what do you do when confronted with approximately 20 pounds of apples? You make hay while the sun shines.

The apples were certainly a gift, coming from my friend Kathryn just a day after I was lamenting that I hadn’t gotten to the farmers’ market to pick up a big bushel. Kathryn doesn’t can, so once she had made a batch of apple butter to store in the fridge, she didn’t quite know what to do with the giant crate of apples. Enter me and my clamoring-for-applesauce son.

For two days I did nothing but focus on these apples. Because they were “seconds” and not necessarily good for straight-up eating, I needed to work quickly. When I was working on my apple pie filling last month I went ahead and bought one of those apple peeling contraptions that seemed silly at the time, but has become one of my family’s favorite tools. It takes a bit to get used to, but once you get into a groove the apples quickly become a dissected pile of cores, peels, and neat slices.

When you have 20 pounds of apples, quite a bit of it is peels and cores, and I just couldn’t bring myself to toss them all. (I did toss some toward the end, and I actually feel guilty about that.) Once the applesauce was done, the apple jalapeno chutney cooling, and the sage apple butter reducing away, I cleaned out my stockpot, pulled the scraps from the fridge, and went to work. After adding water to the scraps, cooking, and straining, I had 3.5 liters of apple juice to work with. Inspired by Kate I knew I had to make a cocktail for that night’s ATX Swappers, and the rest would turn into apple cinnamon syrup.

I absolutely adore real maple syrup and have lovely memories of visiting a sugar shack as a child, but naturally flavored syrups also have their place at the breakfast table. I love that with this recipe you’re making something out of practically nothing. Maple syrup is expensive, and I’m glad to have this method in my back pocket. Added bonus? Everyone will think you’re being gourmet, not thrifty.

Apple Cinnamon Syrup

Apple scraps (peels, cores, and a handful of flesh chunks)
Water
1-2 cinnamon sticks
Brown sugar

Put apple scraps in a large stockpot. Add water to cover (scraps will float). Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to medium and let simmer for approximately one hour, or until cores and chunks are falling apart.
Line a colander with cheesecloth and strain scraps into a large container. Let rest at minimum two hours. In the meantime, clean your stockpot and catch up on the laundry.
Pour juice into stockpot. Break cinnamon sticks in half and add to pot. Bring to a boil, then reduce to medium and let simmer. Once the liquid has reduced by one-third, remove cinnamon sticks. Add brown sugar, 1/4 cup at a time, tasting as you go to achieve desired sweetness. Continue to reduce until a cooled portion of liquid is sticky and syrupy. Note that the syrup will probably not be as thick as maple syrup, though it will thicken some upon cooling. (You can add more sugar and cook for longer for a thicker product.)
Cool slightly and pour into jars or bottles. Let cool completely and store in the fridge.

Note: Although apple season is over here in Texas, this recipe would work equally well with pear scraps.

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Zucchini Hummus

I am in awe of anyone who is able to work through the copious amounts of zucchini we are (still!) getting every week in my CSA. Zucchini is one of my favorite vegetables, and yet once we get past a certain point in the season, I find the need to hide it in my food. Night after night, when it comes time to cook dinner, I just can’t seem to bring myself to pull out the zucchini yet again.

Maybe because it’s almost November. Maybe because I am just so tired of these hot weeks that come back to taunt us after a few lucky days of chill. (I’m giddy with the thought of tomorrow’s forecast that promises highs lower than our recent lows.) But come on, zucchini. You speak of summer and long evenings, and here we are with the sun setting early. But you’re no match for me. I’ll get through you yet.

zucchini hummus

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Peach Walnut Bruschetta

I love things that require only a few ingredients. As the heat continues, and continues to steal my energy away, the ability to throw a few things together in little time has saved many meals. I mean, I have pages scribbled with recipe ideas, posts half-drafted and lacking only the food to tie it up in a bow. But being in the kitchen for more than 15 minutes at a time? Please. Give me some bread and toppings and I’ll be a happy girl.

Eating like this reminds me of our time in Paris. It’s not that we ever ate bruschetta there, but we chose to have many of our lunches on a park bench, sharing a baguette sandwich and fruit while we attempted to soak up the last of our pre-baby time. Simple meals bring me back to those afternoons of soaking up an early spring sun, wandering foreign streets, and being blissful in the moment.

I was really excited to see shallots in my produce delivery. I never had shallots until I was an adult, so whenever I see them at the grocery store they seem too extravagant to purchase. Now that my countertops are littered with shallots, I have plenty to experiment with. I’ve pulled together some of the last summer peaches, crunchy walnuts, and softened shallots for a topping that celebrates summer while looking forward to the autumn ahead.

Peach Walnut Bruschetta

1 large peach
3 shallots
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/4 cup walnuts
Sliced French bread

Halve, de-pit, and peel peach. Cut into small chunks and put into a bowl.
Heat a small saucepan over medium. Add olive oil and heat through. Peel shallots and slice thinly, then add to the pan. Lower heat to medium-low, and let shallots cook until soft.
Chop or crumble walnuts by hand and add to the shallots, gently toasting until fragrant. Remove from heat and stir mixture into peaches. Let sit for a moment while you toast the bread.
Top each slice of bread with a generous scoop.

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Roasted Hatch Peach Salsa

I love sweet salsas. Maybe it’s just because I’m a bit of a wimp when it comes to heat (at least compared to others here in Texas) but I really like the play of spicy and sweet.

Our challenge in the Can Jam for September was stone fruits. Kind of hilarious in a way, because Kate, who chose this month’s challenge, is a Texan living in Brooklyn who knows we’re almost at the end of stone fruit season. Damn you, Kate! Luckily for her the farmers’ markets have come through and I don’t have to pretend to be mad at her anymore.

Roasted Hatch Peach Salsa

This recipe is tweaked from Canning with Kids who tweaked her recipe from the Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving. You can use hot or mild Hatch peppers, or a mix of both.

Also, I recommend that if you scale down the recipe due to not having enough tomatoes, you remember to scale down the honey and vinegar. Ahem.

Roasted Hatch Peach Salsa

makes about 6 half pints

4 cups diced tomatoes
4 cups diced peaches
1 cup diced white onion
1 cup diced roasted Hatch peppers
1/4 cup finely chopped cilantro
1/2 cup honey
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup lemon juice

In a large saucepan or Dutch oven, combine tomatoes, peaches, peppers, and onions. Heat to a low boil over medium high.
Add remaining ingredients and simmer until thickened to desired consistency.
Ladle into jars and process in a water bath canner for 20 minutes, or put in freezer jars and let cool.

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Sparkling Fig Jam

One can never have too much jam.

The September 2010 Daring Cooks’ challenge was hosted by John of Eat4Fun. John chose to challenge The Daring Cooks to learn about food preservation, mainly in the form of canning and freezing. He challenged everyone to make a recipe and preserve it. John’s source for food preservation information was from The National Center for Home Food Preservation.

I was thrilled when I read the September challenge. I’m no stranger to canning of course, being in the home stretch of the Can Jam and having canned plenty in addition to that. The challenge included recipes for roasted tomatoes (which I did and are glorious), bruschetta in a jar, and apple butter. I still have apple butter left from last year’s apple orchard haul, so because I’m familiar with canning I decided on a new recipe.

I still was working with the lovely figs I received from the California Fig Advisory Board, so I racked my brain for jam ideas. Upon remembering I had some Riando pink prosecco in the fridge, I decided to make a sparkling fig jam.

One thing that makes the recipe easier is the realization that you can just scoop out the fig pulp as though it were a kiwi or grapefruit. No bothering with trying to peel and dice! Plus this makes so much more sense for jam, as you typically mash the fruit anyway.

My only issue is that this may be a little sweet. If you plan on just putting this in freezer containers or eating it within a couple weeks, feel free to reduce the sugar. The calcium water and pectin are optional, but I was concerned about getting a proper set and added it in. Adding the extra Prosecco at the end helps give it a bit of a bubbly taste to it.

Also, you now have an open bottle of Prosecco to deal with. You’re welcome.

Sparkling Fig Jam

Sparkling Fig Jam

makes about four half-pints

3 cups figs, scooped out of the skins with a spoon
1/4 cup lemon juice
3 cups sugar
1/2 cup Prosecco

1 tablespoon Pomona’s calcium water
1 tablespoon Pomona’s pectin powder
1/4 cup Prosecco

Day 1:
In a large non-reactive pot, combine figs, lemon juice, sugar, and 1/2 cup Prosecco. Cover and refrigerate for 12-24 hours.

Day 2:
Let pot return to room temperature. Heat to a boil, stirring to make sure everything has dissolved properly. Add calcium water and pectin and bring back to a boil for 2 minutes. Stir in the 1/4 cup Prosecco. Ladle into sterilized jars and process for 20 minutes, or pour into freezer jars and let cool.

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Ketchup

Homemade ketchup.

I know. I know what this sounds like. One, I’ve gone completely off the deep end when it comes to this canning thing. Two, I clearly have too much free time, because hello, ketchup?

Number one is probably true, but number two really isn’t. I’ve got so many projects going right now it’s a wonder I can think straight. It does seem strange that I can get so much done plus work a full-time job, but I’ll let you in on a secret. My house is a mess.

Good thing making ketchup is a bit hands-off once you’ve got it in the pot, because then I can run around picking up toy cars, folding laundry, and checking Twitter.

What? Just being honest here.

OK. The ketchup. When I was at Camp Blogaway we received the gorgeous cookbook Eating Local. I was planning on buying it anyway, so score! Flipping through it, trying to find a recipe to use the produce we had in season at the time, I came across the Nitty Gritty Dirt Farm Ketchup. Except, it had about a bazillion ingredients. So I turned to Jam it, Pickle It, Cure It, but that recipe used canned tomatoes and seemed almost too easy. I did my best to combine the two, and I think for my first try at ketchup it turned out fairly well.

Why bother making my own ketchup? Having a small child means there is a chance of going through a lot of ketchup. While there are now many brands that use regular sugar instead of HFCS, I still don’t know what exactly goes into the creation of that bottle. This one of the main reasons we do home canning – those of us who are concerned about what we put into our bodies are more able to trust the products we make ourselves. Homemade ketchup tastes great – actually like tomatoes and spices, not like sugar. You won’t get the same uniform puree that the bottled stuff has, but this does thicken up rather nicely, especially after being stored in the cupboard for a while.

The thing about this ketchup – when you think you’re done, cook it longer. You really want good low-and-slow simmer on this in order to make sure it goes from a strange pasta sauce to an almost-paste.
It’s also important to make a bouquet garni for the spices, because you won’t be dividing them up into each jar (like you would for making pickles, for example). Usually people use squares of cheesecloth for this, but when I made the ketchup I actually used some medical gauze! I also like to use tea filters.

I’d post the recipe for this, but I really think you should go out and buy Eating Local. Even if you’re not interested in making ketchup, there are a lot of other yummy recipes and the photography is lick-the-page gorgeous.

What did you do with your tomatoes this year? Have you tried making ketchup?

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