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Glazed apples with Calvados crème fraîche

Glazed apples with Calvados crème fraîche

Cooking apples

When it comes to cooking, all apples (and there are lots of ‘em!) aren’t created equal. The glossy green Granny smith is arguably the best apple for cooking, especially in purées and sauces. Its natural tartness makes it ideal for relishes. golden delicious apples have juicy, aromatic flesh and are perfect to use when you want apples to hold their shape after cooking (as in our cider-roasted spatchcock). They are also suited to apple tarts and could be used in place of Braeburns in the apple, ginger and almond cake. Crisp and juicy braeburns, with a pink-red blush against green skin, are great baking apples, although some would argue they are best enjoyed when eaten raw. Another blushing variety is the pink lady, a cross between golden delicious and Lady Williams. A very popular eating apple, its firm dense flesh also holds up well to caramelising, baking and for use in pies. Dark red and elongated, red delicious are the least suited to cooking. They’re best put to use thinly sliced raw through salads, where their sweetness is beautifully offset with a piquant dressing. Other great cooking apples include cox’s orange pippin, lady williams and, if you can get your hands on them, crabapples, which make the finest tarte Tatin you could hope to eat (look out for the John Downie variety).

Glazed apples with Calvados crème fraîche

Serves 4
Cooking Time Prep time 10 mins, cook 30 mins
Glazed apples
375 ml (1½ cups)   dessert wine
330 gm (1½ cups)   caster sugar
50 ml   Calvados
3 pieces   orange rind, removed with a peeler
4   small pink lady apples
Calvados crème fraîche
300 gm (1¼ cups)   crème fraîche
20 gm   brown sugar
10 ml   Calvados


1 For Calvados crème fraîche, combine ingredients in a bowl and whisk until smooth, refrigerate until required.
2 Combine dessert wine, sugar, Calvados and orange rind in a deep-sided frying pan, stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Increase heat to medium-high and boil for 7-8 minutes.
3 Meanwhile, trim 1cm from ends of apples, then halve crossways, removing seeds. Add apple to syrup in a single layer, reduce heat to low-medium and simmer for 8-10 minutes or until apples are tender, remove from heat, turn apples and stand for 10 minutes. Serve warm with Calvados crème fraîche.


RECIPE Emma Knowles PHOTOGRAPHY Ben Dearnley STYLING Emma Knowles


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