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Persimmons and Pears with Cinnamon and Star Anise: The Season’s Last Adventure in Canning

November 30, 2010 Leave a Comment

I love the Atwater library. Anywhere I can walk in and take books out for free is a miraculous thing to me. Atwater just happens to be the version of that system closest to my house. There’s actually a membership (which I think defeats the purpose of “free lending”…I actually laughed at my roommate last year when he BOUGHT a membership) but it’s so little and so convenient that it’s worth it.

There’s a cookbook section. Of course, I do read other things…but put me in front of two bookshelves on foodstuffs and I’m a happy camper. I took out three canning books (mostly out of practicality, since I couldn’t carry more than that at the time) awhile ago and proceeded to pickle up a storm. The last thing I made before returning the books was a recipe for canned pears. I had a few persimmons kicking around and so I threw those in too, hoping that was kosher. Someone will tell me now if it’s not, I hope. I left one jar un-canned and enjoyed the fruit in the fresh syrup.

So I can’t give you the exact recipe I used, but find yourself a library or a reputable online canning source, and go to it. It was really simple, and pear and star anise is a basic combo. You take some sugar and water in a pot. Dissolve the sugar, and bring the liquid to a boil. Add the cinnamon sticks (I added extra ground cinnamon as well) and star anise and reduce the heat to let the syrup thicken and the spices infuse.

Peel and core the fruit and remove any soft spots or overripe sections. Slice them into sizes that will fit into jars. If they can’t get in easily, they can’t get out easily, and you don’t want to be sitting around a few weeks later bemoaning the fact that the slice of pear you’re craving is playing hard to get.

Sterilize the jars, put the fruit in the jars, almost to the top, pour on the hot syrup. Place the warmed lids on the hot jars, put sterilized rings on top of the lids, and process them again. I forget how long I had to process them, but it was pretty painless. Much easier than jam since the liquid doesn’t have to get to the jam stage. So it was more like a pickle, but with sugar. See, I know nothing about canning. It was so nothing like a pickle.

The cans looked beautiful, and I decided to can the cinnamon sticks with the fruit, so the syrup will keep infusing over time. Now I know some people don’t like cinnamon as much as I do and it may get overpowering, but anyone to whom I offer this fruit is going to have to like cinnamon. Otherwise, what the heck are they doing in my kitchen? Go find another kitchen to pillage.

You know what? The fruit gets better and better as it softens in the syrup, but since it’s a simple syrup, what made this INCREDIBLE was eating it with my ginger confit. Absolutely amazing. The ginger cut through the sweetness, and then the earthy power of the cinnamon…and then the bitterness of the star anise…nothing like it. If you don’t want to can you can just cook the fruit pieces a little in the syrup while it’s simmering. That works too, but you can’t enjoy it a month later when persimmons are no longer in season…So if you can can…

All Recipes, Canning and Preserves, Fruit canned persimmons, persimmons, star anise

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