Monday, 24 October 2022

Quince Paste

Recently I had a conversation with a Dutch friend about quinces. He wanted to know if quinces were used much in French cooking, because he loves them and in the Netherlands they are a forgotten fruit. He buys them in the Turkish grocers, or picks them up for free from someone who has some trees and can't sell the fruit. Finally he planted a tree of his own and this year got enough fruit to make a couple of pies. He says he particularly likes the combination of chicken and quince, but I'm not familiar with that dish. We also discussed that in many places there is a tradition of quinces being put on top of wardrobes to make bedrooms smell nice.

Quinces, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Quinces on a roadside tree in September.

Quince trees thrive in the Touraine. We don't have one in the orchard, but our neighbour does, and as quince trees produce large quantities of fruit, we benefit from periodic gifts of quinces. They are an old fashioned sort of fruit and our elderly neighbour is delighted that I like them and, perhaps more importantly, know how to cook them.

Boiler with mesh lid to prevent hot liquids splashing. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Molten lava countered with a mesh lid.

Being large, they are the last of the fruit to ripen and are ready in late September - October. I poach a few, but most of them go to make jelly and I run the pulp that remains after straining for jelly through a food mill to remove skin and seeds. It sits in the freezer until I get it out to make quince paste.

Homemade quince paste. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
The stiff dark paste just out of the oven.


Quince paste seems to have originated in Turkey and from there made its way to Spain and Portugal. In English language cookbooks it is often called membrillo, which is the Spanish word for quince. Quince paste in Spanish is called dulce de membrillo. The French for quince is coing, so quince paste is pâte de coing. In England it is commonly referred to as quince cheese, and this is how I first encountered it, at the farmers market I shopped at regularly in the late 1990s-early 2000s. It is used both in a sweet and a savoury context, as a counter to strongly flavoured cheeses or game and as a petit four or friandise with coffee. In France it is regarded as a seasonal treat, made in the autumn and served over the Christmas - New Year period.

Homemade quince paste. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Starting to cut the block of paste into rods.

To make it you combine an equal quantity of quince pulp and sugar in a large boiler. Heat it slowly to dissolve the sugar and then simmer for about 1.5 hours, on the lowest possible heat. It burns easily, so check it regularly and scrape the bottom of the pan. Slowly the colour will darken from orangey pink to brownish orange as it cooks. It is like working with molten lava, both in its appearance and its capacity to burn the unwary cook. You can't cook it with the lid on because you need to drive a fair bit of water off. To protect against burns and splashes I use a mesh lid on the pan, which allows steam, but nothing else out.

Homemade quince paste, cut into rods and wrapped. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
All wrapped up and ready to store in the fridge.

Once it has got thick and dark and you are having difficulty preventing it from burning even on the lowest heat, transfer it to a baking tray lined with baking paper. Put it in the oven at 50°C for another 1.5 hours to dry out some more. Then leave it in the fridge overnight to cool completely and set. The next day tip it out on to a board dredged in icing or vanilla sugar. Ideally, cut the paste into thick rods with a wire, but a long knife will do. Dredge or roll these rods in sugar, wrap in waxed paper and refridgerate. To serve, unwrap and cut into cubes. Roll the cubes in vanilla, golden castor or raw sugar.

Coffee and quince friandises, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Coffee and quince friandises.

You can also bottle (can) it by putting it in sterilised jars instead of in the oven. Close the jars and process in a water bath in the normal way. This will give you a paste for spreading on bread like a jam, which is very popular in Spain topped with Manchego cheese.

Box of quinces, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
A box of quinces from our orchard neighbour.
 
And for those of you interested in maintaining a certain sort of daily regularity, quince paste works as well as the traditional prune.

2 comments:

Jean said...

I made a quince tarte tatin once - but only the once. Peeling them was easy but coring them was a devil of a job I seem to remember!

Susan said...

Jean: Yes, they are tough fruit.

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