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VERJUICE-POACHED STONE FRUIT WITH A WEDGE OF CHEESE
Verjuice-poached stone fruit with a wedge of cheese
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How to:

Use verjuice

Verjuice is the juice of unripe grapes. Its gentle tartness was used for flavouring as early as the Middle Ages. It was first made from other unripe fruits such as sour plums, gooseberries, sour crab apples and even sorrel and cress before grapes were used.

It was Maggie Beer, the respected Australian cook and food writer who brought verjuice to the modern table. 

A glut of unsold grapes in 1984 prompted the idea. She used it at her restaurant in Barossa Valley, but by 1996 the product was sold internationally. Today there are excellent local labels available.

  • Use verjuice instead of lemon juice or vinegar
  • In salad dressings
  • In marinades
  • To deglaze a pan of sauteed seafood
  • Pour over a roasted chicken towards the end of cooking
  • Spoon over roated beetroot
  • Moisten grilled tomatoes
  • Dress grilled fish


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Recipe by: Abigail Donnelly
Serves: 8
Allergens: Wheat free / Gluten free
Dietary considerations: Fat conscious
Category: Vegetarian / Easy / Great value
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Ingredients:
2 cups verjuice
1 T pink peppercorns
6 juniper berries
1/3 cup brown sugar
6 ripe nectarines
6 ripe plums
Mature Cheddar cheese, for serving
Cooking instructions:

Place a small saucepan over a medium heat and add the verjuice, peppercorns, juniper berries and brown sugar. Stir until dissolved.

Cut the nectarines and plums into wedges and add to the warm syrup. Bring to a gentle simmer and slowly stew until the fruit is tender, juicy and fragrant.

Serve with thin slivers of mature cheese.

Wine: Kumkani Chenin Blanc 2008


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½ t = 2 ml
1 t = 5 ml
1 T = 15 ml
½ cup = 125 ml
1 cup = 250 ml

Fahrenheit - Celsius

Subtract 32, then multiply by 0.56

Celsius - Fahrenheit

Multiply by 1.8, then add 32




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