Tim Bowley
This is the brandied fruit recipe. I don't know that I would compare it to
a fruit salad, but it is good on ice cream.
Brandied fruit, like friendship bread, involves making a starter, feeding
it and then sharing. Because brandy is used in the macerating, there is
little possibility of spoilage or contamination. Just be sure the fruit is
covered by the liquid at all times; add more brandy if necessary to ensure
this. The fruit can be simply served over ice cream or pound cake, or can
be baked in a cake, as in the recipe here.
Brandied Fruit Starter
1 can (about 20 ounces) pineapple chunks, drained
1 can (about 16 ounces) peach slices, drained
1 can (about 16 ounces) apricot halves, drained
1 jar (about 10 ounces) maraschino cherries, drained
1- 1 / 4 cups sugar
1- 1 / 4 cups brandy
Combine all ingredients in a large, clean jar. Stir gently with wooden
spoon. Cover and let stand at room temperature for 3 weeks, stirring at
least twice a week. Serve over ice cream or pound cake, use in recipes
and/or feed as below. Store at room temperature. To keep starter going,
maintain at least 3 cups of it in jar at all times.
To feed: Once every 2 weeks, stir in 1 cup sugar and 1 cup canned
pineapples, peaches or cherries, alternating fruits each time and stirring
gently. You should not have to add more brandy. (Some recipes alternate
other canned fruits including fruit cocktail, mandarin oranges and pears.)
You can delay feeding for a day or two, but should not feed more often
than every two weeks. Cover starter and let it stand at least 3 days
before using. (You can tell the fruit is fermented when it is
translucent.) Stir daily.
To share: Whenever you have more than 6 cups of fermented fruit, you may
divide it into two portions of at least 3 cups each. Do this just before a
normal feeding, then go ahead and feed each portion. Give one portion to a
friend and keep the other.
Per 1 / 2 cup: 253 calories, 0 fat, 0 cholesterol, 1 g protein, 58 g
carbohydrates, 2 g fiber, 8 mg sodium.
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<huge snip>
just curious...is this like a 'rum pot'? My mom made something like this
when I was a kid...I remember she put fruit in a crock with sugar and
rum...it sat on the counter for days? weeks? I dunno....everything turned
purple (must have been the predominant fruit colour)...dunno what the
process was, but I remember eating it on ice cream and on sponge cake.....
Really, I'm just curious...never liked it enough to wanna make it.....
Kathi
Tim
"Kathi Jones" <kat...@storm.ca> wrote in message
news:naudndKZT5D-qUfY...@storm.ca...