This year our Ten Things column each month is concentrating on food. Not necessarily the most common or obvious foods, but hopefully ones everyone will recognise.
This is an old recipe, but one I’ve not tried before. I’m not a fan of the simple baked apple, but I’ve had Apples in Nightgowns in the past (thanks Robert & Theo, wherever you are now) I know how good they can be. So having plenty of apples, a block of pastry and the end of a jar of mincemeat I figured I’d make up my own version.
To get us started, here’s a traditional German recipe. But like most things around here it’s almost infinitely flexible.
Pre-heat the oven to whatever temperature the pastry needs, and prepare a baking sheet lined with baking parchment.
Peel and core the apples being sure to keep them whole. If you wish dip the apples in a drop of lemon juice or water to prevent them browning.
Roll out the pastry; it needs to be very thin to be large enough for four apples. Cut the sheet of pastry into four squares.
Place an apple on each square of pastry and fill the core hole with mincemeat; pack the mincemeat in well with the end of a wooden spoon (or similar pusher); it doesn’t matter if it overflows the top.
Wash the pastry with milk (or egg) and wrap it neatly over the apple to enclose it.
Place the enveloped apples on the baking tray; glaze with milk (or egg); and sprinkle with a little granulated sugar.
Bake for 10 minutes at the pastry temperature; then turn the oven down 20°C and bake for a further 20-30 minutes until golden brown and the apple has had time to cook through.
Dust with icing sugar and serve hot or cold with, for preference, double cream.
Notes
As the original recipe implies, you can stuff the apples with almost anything of your choice: fruit & nuts, marmalade, jam, mincemeat …
I used puff pastry because I happened to have some; shortcrust should work just as well.
Traditionally this is made with cooking apples, but they’ll likely need a bit more sweetening than I’ve used here (although the mincemeat was pretty sweet).
Eccentric looks at life through the thoughts of a retired working thinker