The kitchen smelled wonderful yesterday, not only were the dehydrators full of papaya, pineapple, banana and jackfruit, but I was baking scones and an oat bar we've been enjoying for breakfast. A friend with an organic farm has a surplus of pineapples at the moment (he did something like we just did: plant 300 same age suckers at once!), and no electricity so he's selling a lot to us. This is great news. Not only have we been eating copious quantities of sweet and sour everything, and drying every day, I've also had enough to experiment with such frivolities as pineapple scones and pineapple jam.
Hating to waste any of the fruit, I've been simmering the skin and cores (they are organic) in water for about 40 minutes, or until the water reduces by a third and then storing it in the fridge, or adding sugar and cooking it down into a syrup. In Nicaragua they make a delicious rice pudding with cooking pineapple peel along with the rice, and in Belize they make a great iced drink with this pineapple 'tea'. The tops have been going to the kindergarten: we've got quite the pineapple patch over there now!
The pineapple scones are the best so far of all the scone flavours I've tried, the farmer says they're up there with the durian scones, but in my mind they're better. Here's the recipe, it's the basic scone mix with extras:
2 cups wholewheat flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
pinch salt
about 1/4 cup sugar
about 3 tablespoons oil
1/3 cup dried pineapple chunks
about 1/4 cup crystallized ginger
about 2/3rds - 1 cup pineapple 'tea'
Mix dry ingredients, add oil and pour in about 2/3rds of the 'tea'. Mix lightly. For scones you want a soft dough, not much handled. Add remaining liquid until the dough comes together in a ball, you probably won't need it all. If it gets overwet add some flour. Turn out on a floured board and pat or gently roll to a thickness of 3/4 inch. Cut into rounds and bake on a cookie sheet in a 350F oven for about 30 minutes. Allow to rest for 5 minutes then enjoy warm.
Oh I just love pineapple and those scones sound scrumptious!
ReplyDeleteVery glad to hear that the leishmniasis is retreating. The reason for my concern was my wife and I had seen a young man with a lamed leg due to this. It is a very hard lfe if you have to hop on one leg, which he did.
ReplyDeleteNow for the extra pineapples. Here's a link to a recipe for pineapple vinagre, courtesy of Daisy Martinez: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/daisy-martinez/spicy-pineapple-vinegar--vinagre-recipe/index.html
This can be used as an amendment in other dishes and uses up the spare peppers you might have. There are also links to additional pineapple recipes on this page.
Belize has the same problem with pineapples. The local growers have them come in all at the same time and so they sell for next to nothing, hard for them to make a living.
Hope you continue to feel good.
Dennis
Thanks for the recipe Ancel! Now that I have found my baking things amongst the heap of boxes I have to unpack, I can try it out! Happy days!!
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