![]() “The salt-cured cod was layered with cream mashed potatoes and presented in a small cocotte… the mussels bathed in white wine and garlic sauce.” It’s not about about food, but every time a meal comes up, I was riveted by how good it sounded. ![]() Serve with ice cream or whipped cream.Ĭlick here to purchase a copy of Jacques Pepin's Fast Food My Way for more dessert inspiration.I read a new novel, The Margot Affair, last month and loved it. Wearing oven mitts, carefully invert the skillet onto a large plate.Remove from oven, and let cool 10 minutes or so to set.Bake for roughly 20 minutes, or until the crust looks browned and done.Place the pie dough over the fruit, tucking the edges in as needed.Remove pan from heat, adding the apricots, cut side down, in a single layer.Stir it gently toward the end of cooking time to prevent it burning. The liquid should become thick and deep amber. Heat the syrup over a high flame for approximately 10 minutes.Gently blot the fruit with a paper towel to absorb any excess liquid, and leave in the colander to continue to drain. Drain the apricots, pouring the syrup into a heavy 9" skillet.1 pre-made pie crust, thawed (or sheet of puff pastry, cut in 10" round).2 15-ounce cans of apricots in heavy syrup.Recipe: Two-Ingredient Apricot Tarte Tatin, adapted from Good Housekeeping and Jacques Pepin's "Fast Food My Way" This week, I put together an apricot tatin in a half hour flat, and I still had time to pop open a can of pinot grigio before dinner even touched the table. Jumping off from Pepin's inspiration, you can use canned pears, pineapple or whatever else rocks your world, and you're halfway to a beautiful dessert. In his follow-up cookbook, he crafts a pear tart with a tortilla. His dessert recipes rely on bread, nuts and the like to make showstoppers of humble ingredients. Pepin is one of the most renowned chefs in the world, but the guy is also a genius at making magic with whatever is on hand. In his 2004 "Fast Food My Way," Jacques Pepin takes ordinary canned peaches, deeply caramelizes their syrup and turns the whole works into an elegant dessert. At last, a detour led me to a recipe blessed by no less than a master of French cooking himself. Plenty of other home cooks before me have applied the dish's basic principles to other fruits, but a deep internet dive at first didn't reveal too much love for the canned stuff. Why would anyone make apple pie when you can throw the same elements together and wind up with something sticky, caramelized and absolutely gorgeous? I also appreciate the dish for its brief ingredient list: pie dough or puff pastry, sugar, butter and apples. But as my thoughts of late have been turning to fall - or apple cider donut time, as I prefer to call it - I've began to think there must be a way to retool a tarte tatin for both warm weather and frazzled nerves. ![]() To that end, I like having canned fruit around, mostly to whizz up in the blender and turn into popsicles. Let's put it this way: This was the summer I got into canned wine. ![]() I'm at my most fragile, and I don't want to peel anything, chop anything or even uncork anything. Come dinnertime, however, I'm anxious and exhausted after having endured at least one meltdown under my family roof (or sometimes playing the starring role). On most mornings as of late, I'll cheerfully slice up a fresh peach to add to my oatmeal or a plum to nestle in my yogurt. Join me, won't you, on this delicious road to culinary treason? Only a monster would crank open the Dole in the midst of a season lousy with perfectly ripe stone fruits. Only a heretic would even look at canned fruit in August.
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