Sauce Magazine

Howdy Stranger!
Login or Create Account
Find A St. Louis Area Restaurant
Servng St Louis Since 1999 | Dine, Drink & Live Well!
 
  Home
  Restaurant Guide
  Feature
  Gourmet Guru
  Saint Louis Scene
  Food IQ
  Bytes
  Libation
  Seasonal Shopper
 
•  No marshmallows necessary
  •  The unlovely root
  •  These peas are worth the effort
  •  Check out the new cucumbers of summer
  •  Tart, tangy rhubarb is a labor of love
  •  More
  Sauce Sponsored
  Events Calendar
  Morning Shift
  Stuff To Do
  Garnish
 
  Prep School
  Kids' Table
  Mixer
  Buy Sauce Stuff
  Sauce on the Street
  St. Louis Dish
 
Don’t be fooled by this funky-looking fruit; sweet persimmons are a true – and tasty – sign of fall  by Pat Eby - ©iStockphoto.com/Norman Eder Printable Version
Posted On: 11/01/2007E-mail This To A Friend!

Hally Bini, market manager for the Maplewood Farmers’ Market, remembered a grove of persimmon trees in Umbria, Italy. “They had dropped all their leaves, and these brilliant orange fruits hung on bare branches – beautiful.” This fall, she’ll find Missouri persimmons close at hand when grower and forager Ivan Stoilov brings them to his stand at her market. Stoilov doesn’t know how many he will find, and Bini won’t be the only one waiting for them.

“Missourians love persimmons. They are a true sign of fall,” said Krista Durlas, local product forager for Whole Foods Market in Brentwood. She is 95 percent sure Whole Foods will carry persimmons from Goods From the Woods organic farm near Licking, Mo. “They have plenty, over 200 trees,” she said, “but we are in the process of setting them up as a vendor with our corporate office.”

While Durlas is waiting for the ink to dry on the contracts, she’s thinking about how to entice people unfamiliar with persimmons to try them. “They’re mushy, spotty, funky-looking fruits,” she said. She’s right. But looks are deceiving: The taste of a ripe persimmon is sweet, sparkly and refreshing. The color can range from deep gold to an orange as bright as pumpkins. In addition to Missouri-grown and -foraged persimmons, several stores will carry the fuyu persimmon, usually grown in California.

The fuyu is shaped like a small, flattened tomato, with a pretty green calyx firmly attached. The Melissa’s brand of cinnamon persimmons at Dierbergs were pricey, just under $2 a pop. I chose the softer fruits, some with brown spots. Fuyus at Jay International Foods on South Grand were bargain-priced at only $1.29 a pound, but when I bought them, they were really unripe. Sappington International Farmers’ Market will carry persimmons, too.

Locally grown persimmons were unavailable when I did my recipe testing; it’s that seasonal thing – nature doesn’t understand deadlines. But I can tell you what worked with the wonderful cinnamon fuyu persimmons. Eating one out of hand, quartered, cored, unpeeled, made a great snack.

A number of recipes recommended peeling, coring, quartering and freezing eight to 10 persimmons, then simply pulsing the frozen pulp in a food processor to make a zingy sorbet. This works amazingly well. I tried a recipe that called for one scoop of premium vanilla ice cream, then a second of persimmon sorbet, topped with puréed raspberries. Neither the sorbet nor the raspberry purée used any sugar, so the dessert showcased the tastes of persimmons and raspberries and the sweetness the ice cream.

Martha Stewart touted persimmons for salads. She suggested peppery escarole as a base of greens, but the taste was too strong for me. I liked a combination of Boston red lettuce and baby spinach leaves, sliced persimmons and red pears, toasted pecans and golden sultanas with a ginger dressing. In a second salad, I tried the same greens with diced persimmons, pomegranate seeds, Jazz apples and toasted pecans with a sesame dressing. Both salads were extraordinarily glam, and so tasty.

I plan to make my bread pudding recipe with Jay’s persimmons when they ripen and when the weather cools. I’ll use brioche as a base, then add persimmons, cinnamon, ginger, sultanas, dried cranberries and pecans. And, of course, I’ll have hard sauce.

One word of caution: Missouri persimmons must be totally ripe or they will be quite bitter. When ripe, they are very soft and the pulp is gelatinous. California fuyus are sweet even when they are slightly underripe. The season is short, mid-October through December, so gather persimmons while ye may and freeze the ones ye can’t eat now for later.

Receive RSS Feeds of Sauce Magazine Articles


Seasonal Shopper Archive
View Complete Archive



Find a St Louis Restaurant

Persimmon Pudding
Courtesy of John C. Rasp

For this recipe, use only ripe, sweet persimmons, best found in Missouri after the first frost. Missouri-grown varieties are best; Japanese varieties tend to be too watery. If you are foraging for them, the best persimmons are found on the ground and look soft and overly ripe. Be sure to peel the fruits before puréeing them, as the skin is bitter-tasting.

1 cup flour
½ tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
3/4 cup sugar
½ cup seedless raisins
½ cup coarsely chopped pecans
1 cup puréed persimmon pulp*
½ tsp. baking soda
¹/³ cup milk
1 tsp. vanilla

• Grease a pudding mold that has a snap-on lid.**
• Prepare the water bath: To enable the hot water and steam to circulate completely around the mold, fit a large pan or stock pot with a wire rack. Fill the pot with enough water to come halfway up the sides of the pudding mold. Bring the water to a gentle simmer over low heat.
• Mix the flour, salt, cinnamon and sugar in a large bowl. Stir in the raisins and pecans.
• In a medium bowl, combine the persimmon pulp, baking soda, milk and vanilla and stir into the flour mixture.
• Pour the batter into the pudding mold, secure the mold’s lid and place the mold lid-side up into the hot water.
• Cover the pot and steam the pudding for 1 hour or until a knife inserted into the middle of the pudding comes out clean, keeping the water at a gentle simmer. Add more water if necessary.
• Remove the mold from the water bath and let cool slightly.
• Unmold the pudding by inverting it onto a serving dish (or simply scoop the pudding into individual bowls for serving).
• Serve warm with hard sauce flavored with brandy.

* To purée the persimmon pulp, remove the stems and peel the persimmons. Put the peeled persimmons through a food mill to remove the seeds.
**If you do not have a pudding mold, put the batter into a greased loaf pan and bake it at 325 degrees for about 50 minutes.


Get Our
Email NewsletterGo

 

Howdy Stranger! Login or Create Account

Advertise  |  E-mail Us  |  About / Contact Sauce  |  Send This Page  | 

Conceived and created by Bent Mind Creative Group, LLC
©1999-2008, Bent Mind Creative Group, LLC. All Rights Reserved

Terms of Use   Privacy Policy