Pears en Papillote |
I thought I might stew the pears and put them under an almond crumble topping, but then my eye fell on a roll of greaseproof baking paper I'd just put in my trolley. (I've recently been baking baby potatoes in paper parcels, with fresh mint, salt and butter; this method produces the most tender and fragrant spuds).
It's like opening a present. |
I know it's an extravagance to use a whole vanilla pod for each pear, but you can recycle the pods by drying them out on a sunny windowsill. Use them for the next batch of pears you make, or to flavour a jar of caster sugar.
If you can't afford a vanilla pod per pear, scrape the seeds out of a single split pod and mix them with the softened butter before you stuff the pears.
Pears en Papillote with Chocolate and Vanilla
a lemon
6 crisp, firm, just-ripe pears
6 vanilla pods (or three pods, split horizontally in two)
a slab of good quality (75%) dark chocolate
3 tsp (15 ml) butter, softened
6 tsp (30 ml) white sugar
extra sugar for dusting
If you're going to bake these right away, preheat the oven to 170 ºC. Cut out six circles of greaseproof baking paper (or parchment paper) each the size of a large dinner plate. The best way to do this is to put a plate face-down on the paper and swiftly cut around it with a sharp craft knife.
Fill a large bowl with cold water and add the juice of half a lemon. Peel the pears using a potato peeler and drop them immediately into the lemony water. When all the pears are peeled, use an apple corer to remove the cores and stalks (take the entire core out, so the chocolate can run out as it melts).. Trim the base of each pear so it stands up upright. Put the pears back into the water to prevent them from browning.
Getting the pears ready for wrapping. |
Push a vanilla pod into the cavity, allowing its end to protrude like a pear stalk. Sprinkle two more teaspoons of sugar and a few drops of lemon juice over the outside of the pear. Gather up the edges of the circle to form a parcel and secure with a piece of damp raffia (or string) tied just above the top of the pear. Repeat with the remaining pears.
Leave the pears to stand for 45 minutes. This isn't essential, but it will give the sugar time to dissolve on the surface of the pear. (At this point, you can put the parcels in the fridge and leave them there for up to 8 hours.)
Place each parcel into a shallow bowl and serve immediately, with whipped cream or custard.
Serves 6.
More of my recipes using pears:
- Hot-Cross-Buns Bread-and-Butter Pudding with Pears
- Fennel Salad with Caramelised Pears, Walnuts and Blue Cheese
- Pear and Blackberry Almond Crumble
17 comments:
Oh my word Jane-Anne! This is genius! I love recipes like this that showcase beautiful ingredients effortlessly. have to try it out.
I agree with you 100% on the life expectancy of a pear. Only about a day window of perfect eating opportunity. I love baked pears, its by far the best way to deal with this fruit. taking them from ordinary to extraordinary. Yum!
Brilliant work Jane. Really it is so clever and the pics are awesome!
Great! It looks so yummie your dessert and so easy to do! I just imagine it with some good icecream....
This is so beautiful! Ive not done much baking with pears which is just plain wrong as they are so so delicious, underrated indeed! This looks like such an impressive little recipe to have on hand. Lovely :)
Dear friends. Thank you for your comments. They are very much appreciated.
This is lovely!!! A share bundle of joy......... Love it.
Those are so pretty, and they look delicious!
Oh wow, your pears look to die for!!!! I've always baked vegetables en papillote but never fruit. I will have to try this.
This is stunning. The recipe, the technique, the photos... everything! I'm tucking this away for a warming fall dessert :) Thank you!
Thank you for these lovely comments.
What a positively elegant dessert! This would be great for a Christmas dinner table! (is it too early too talk about that?)
Am just imagining what heady perfume the vanilla pods impart to these pears - boy would I love to rip open a parcel like that!
When coring the pears, do you go all the way through the pear or stop part way? I'm not sure if the chocolate mixxture is supposed to remain in the part or should it be able to flow out the bottom once in the oven? Thanks!
Hi Anon. Thanks for the comment. Take the entire core out, so - as you say - the chocolate can run out. Thanks for pointing out that this isn't clear. I have amended the recipe. Jane-Anne
Wow, that's a beautiful presentation! I've been looking for en papillote recipes and this is by far the prettiest I've seen. Thanks for the directions.
Hi Julie!
Thank you very much! Your comment is much appreciated.
Kind regards
Jane-Anne
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