Concord grapes always tend to sneak up on us. A first signal of autumn, it’s not uncommon to begin seeing them as early as late August. I love them, but for some reason I usually get stuck for ideas. Because of their seeds, they have to processed, and in the end, they just seem to lose a little something along the way. And simply turning them into coulis or sorbet seems boring.
Undeterred, we've set about blending and straining several cases since their arrival, incorporating them into a few different applications this season.
We're still exploring complimentary flavors via pate de fruit. Here, concord grape is teamed up with pear:
Though we haven't ever introduced gelatin clarification into a regular production or menu item, we play around with the method from time to time. It's a great way to transform a muddy-looking grape puree into a more refined end result. A dosage of 0.5% gelatin is dissolved into the puree, and then its frozen. The solid block is then allowed to slowly thaw through a chinois, producing a translucent to clear juice; the nasty bits get caught up in the protein network provided by the gelatin. Knowing that tannins can sometimes affect certain hydrocolloids, we haven't played around with this enough to notice.
Cheese has found its way back into some of our pre-dessert work; most recently, chevre has been given the spherification treatment. We using the 'reverse' method, of course, and a 0.8% alginate/water bath The natural calcium present in the goat cheese mixture is sufficient for the skin to form. Heavy production of this and a couple other spheres has taught us how a holding bath can help us control the end result. Storing the finished orbs in syrup make sense in a sweet application. A weak syrup actually helps to nicely 'tighten' their shape, though we learned the hard way that the syrup itself can suck away too much internal moisture, shrinking the spheres down to half their original size.
The grapes enter the dish in the form of cold oil/agar agar pearls, and the whole is finished with candied walnut and a half-grind of black pepper.
Concord season has also afforded us the perfect opportunity to work on a technique that's been on my to-do list for months. Borrowing a concept from the El Bulli camp, the goal is to create a stable liquid that can be baked into the center of a cake. I've seen a few minor variations, but the basic idea is to gel a fruit mixture with aglinate and calcium gluconate, followed by blending, molding, and freezing. The frozen center is then inserted into a batter. I've seen a similar effect achieved by Stupak, using gellan to give his carameilzed brioche pudding a liquid caramel interior.
Here, the soft grape is baked into a standard financier. Perhaps I see a peanut butter and grape variation in our future.
Download: Concord Grape Pâte de Fruit- Workbook 01.11.09
Download: Concord Grape Pearls- Workbook 01.11.09
Download: Chèvre Spherification- Workbook 01.11.09
Have you played with Dave Arnold's stupid simple agar clarification: http://vb.ly/5y8? It's an excellent and very fast way to clarify liquids with a yield much higher than gelatin.
Posted by: Jeffje | November 01, 2009 at 06:32 PM
Jeffje,
Indeed, though I would hesitate to say that anything Dave does is simple! Just as a matter of knowledge, I would encourage the neophyte to try both methods.
Posted by: Michael Laiskonis | November 01, 2009 at 07:34 PM
Michael,
What type of pectin are you using for the pate de fruit? Is it apple pectin, the generic non-specific type, or some other special kind? Thanks!
Posted by: Ryan | November 09, 2009 at 07:50 PM
Yes, that's a traditional pate de fruit using apple pectin...
Posted by: Michael Laiskonis | November 09, 2009 at 08:49 PM
Would you not use water in the pearl recipe because the grape puree is thinner than say raspberry puree?
Posted by: monica | November 12, 2009 at 08:07 AM
Monica,
Yes, it is more of a 'juice', but I also think the ghrape stands up to the cooking process better than other fruits, so I don't have to dilute the flavor.
Posted by: Michael Laiskonis | November 12, 2009 at 11:31 AM
I assume that the glucose you're using here is atomized glucose, and not glucose syrup?
Posted by: Marcus Walser | November 13, 2009 at 12:33 PM
Chef,
I have seen other people do pearls with just Agar agar. What does the addition of the LBG do to the final product?
Since pectin sets also sets quickly like Agar, is there any reason why one couldn't make pearls out of a Pate de Fruit in a similar way?
Thanks
Posted by: David | December 02, 2009 at 02:52 PM