Butter-Poached Stone Fruit

Butter-Poached Stone Fruit
Yunhee Kim for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Theo Vamvounakis.
Total Time
30 minutes
Rating
4(36)
Comments
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Stone fruit is summer in your hand. To me, there isn’t a better unmessed-with food than a good, ripe peach. Still, stone fruit can be fun to play around with, and a recipe for one kind is a recipe for almost all. Peaches, nectarines, apricots, plums, mangoes and cherries all respond similarly to sautéing, poaching, macerating, grilling, roasting and drying. And once cooked, stone fruit goes with just about everything.

The length of cooking time will vary, depending mostly on the quality and ripeness of the fruit. Peel it if you like, or leave the skin on to retain texture and extra flavor. (Peeled fruit will cook through faster.) To peel, plunge fruit into boiling water for 10 to 20 seconds to loosen the skin, then slip it off. When you pit the fruit — and you will need to remove the stones for each of these recipes — do so over a bowl to catch the juice, and use it instead of water where needed.

Featured in: A Dozen Ways to Serve Stone Fruit

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Ingredients

  • cups sugar
  • 5cups water
  • 1stick butter
  • Seeds of 1 vanilla bean
  • pounds halved fruit (peaches, cherries, plums, nectarines, apricots or mangoes will work)
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Cooking Newsletter illustration

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Combine 2½ cups sugar, 5 cups water, 1 stick butter and the seeds of 1 vanilla bean in a saucepan; bring to a boil.

  2. Step 2

    Add 1½ pounds halved fruit, reduce heat and cook until tender, 10 to 15 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Remove fruit from liquid. Cool slightly and serve.

Ratings

4 out of 5
36 user ratings
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Comments

Why? The taste of the butter did NOT infuse the fruit. And I measured and everything. And I tried it with unsalted butter and then again with salted butter. Waste of time and resources.

Scoop of vanilla ice cream melting on the warm fruit was ultimate summer. So easy that even on hot evening, poaching the fruit was worthwhile.

Why? The taste of the butter did NOT infuse the fruit. And I measured and everything. And I tried it with unsalted butter and then again with salted butter. Waste of time and resources.

Maybe try browning the butter first then adding the water and sugar to create the poaching liquid?

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