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Saved 12/14/09 to Kitchen Goddess

12 Days of Edible Gifts: Quince Paste


Surprise your friends this holiday with the unique edible gift of quince paste. Quince is a fruit closely related to apples and pears, but it's most commonly cooked into a jam, paste, or pudding. In Spain, quince paste (dulce de membrillo) is served with manchego. After tasting this sweet and salty combination, the paste has become an essential on my cheese plate. Since quince season ends in December, it's the perfect time to make this gift for cheese-lovers. Most recipes call for drying the paste in the oven for 15 hours, but luckily, I found one on Epicurious that simplifies the process. With a little experimenting, I was able to adapt their recipe to create a delightful quince paste with a consistency somewhere between jelly and gumdrops. Discover quince paste by

Modified from Gourmet

Quince Paste

Easy Quince Paste Recipe

Ingredients

4 medium quinces (about 2 pounds total)
1/4 to 1/2 cup water
2 to 3 cups sugar

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and lightly oil a 1-quart terrine and line with buttered parchment.
  2. Scrub quinces and pat dry. In a small roasting pan bake quinces, covered with foil, in middle of oven until tender, about 2 hours, and transfer pan to a rack.
  3. When quinces are cool enough to handle, with a sharp knife peel, quarter, and core them.
  4. In a food processor puree pulp with 1/4 cup water until smooth (if mixture is too thick, add remaining 1/4 cup water a little at a time, as needed). Force puree through a large fine sieve or cheese cloth into a liquid cup measure and measure amount of puree.
  5. Transfer puree to a 3-quart heavy saucepan and add an equivalent amount of sugar.
  6. Preheat the oven to 200. Cook quince puree over moderate heat, stirring constantly, until it is thickened and begins to pull away from side of pan, about 25 minutes.
  7. Pour puree into terrine, smoothing top with an offset spatula. Place in the oven for 30-45 minutes to further dry the quince paste. Cool and chill puree, loosely covered with plastic wrap, until set, about 4 hours.
  8. Run a thin knife around sides of terrine and invert quince paste onto a platter. (Quince paste keeps, wrapped well in wax paper and then plastic wrap and chilled, 3 months.)
  9. Slice paste and serve with cheese and crackers.

Makes about 2 1/4 pounds quince paste.

lauren lauren
Oh, amberhoney, that sounds divine, could you post the recipe!
AmberHoney AmberHoney
I made 4 different quince recipes this year and still have 6 huge ones in my fridge. For Thanksgiving I made quince and sweet potatoes with sage, maple syrup and salt - roasted. OMGoodness it was a huge hit!
Iveenia Iveenia
we too - - Thank you for sharing :) we also made jam with it and added some zests of lemon and lemon juice to it which made is MARVELOUS - also in color :)
My dad had quince in his yard and we never knew what to do with them. Should have had this recipe sooner. Need to give it a try! :)
This really looks good and definitely makes for a neat treat to take the Hostess of your next party invite! Totally doable!! :)
rainydaybleus rainydaybleus
Great photos. Quince is new to me. I tried it once at the grocery store and wasn't sure what I thought of it. This, however, has convinced me to give it a second chance.
lauren lauren
Yum! I love Quince Paste!