desperance: (Default)
[personal profile] desperance
[This is my take on David Lebovitz'z take on James Beard's original, so.]

I weighed and measured everything this time, in order to be able to tell you that you need:


250g plain flour
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
200g sugar
110g melted unsalted butter
2 large eggs, beaten
80g brandy
275g persimmon puree*
125g toasted pecans
150g Medjool dates, destoned and cut into chunks


[*Note: you need hachiya persimmons, the heart-sized heart-shaped ones; and you need them so squishily ripe they feel like water balloons. Two might be enough, whizzed up in a food processor; you might need three; you'll probably want somewhere between the two. But if you find ripe hachiya persimmons, your best bet is to buy a lot, puree 'em all and freeze what you don't use for later consumption. We are blessed with a friend with a tree, and even so I am backfilling my freezer. The season is short, but art is longing**.]


Oil or butter a loaf tin (I use almond oil for preference for all sweet baking).

Preheat the oven to 350/180/gas mark 4.

Sift the dry ingredients together in a bowl. Make a well in the centre and pour in the butter, eggs, brandy and puree; mix those in, then fold in the nuts and the dates.

Pour the batter into the ready tin, stand it on a baking tray for fear of overspill and slide it into the mid/top of the oven. Check it after an hour; I find it needs ten minutes more than that, until a metal skewer comes out clean. (Don't rely on the touch-the-skewer-to-your-lip-and-it's-ready-when-it-burns-you trick; it won't actually get that hot.)

Cool in the tin. It keeps well if it's well wrapped in tinfoil; it should also freeze well.


**Persimmon puree is my Thing of the Moment. I put it in everything from ground beef curry to salad dressings. More to come.

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Date: 2014-12-21 03:31 am (UTC)
movingfinger: (Default)
From: [personal profile] movingfinger
You can freeze whole ripe persimmons, also, and eat them rather like those frozen sherbet-filled lemons and oranges---take slice off top and scoop. (They do have to be truly bletted before they're ready to eat, though. Freezing them on a tray to keep them in good shape till they're solid and then putting them in bags gives the best results.)

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