Precious Preserved Pears

My mother’s grandmother was a tobacco farmer out in Brantford, Ontario, and although I never met her, my mother is full of stories about her amazing cooking and baking. She ran a bit of a homestead, growing many of her own fruits and vegetables right on her land. She may have passed before my time but she left behind jars and jars of canned pears, which my family and I continued to eat for years (a testament to her skills at preservation!). The jars of pears were kept in the cool darkness of our basement, and as the years went on and the pear reserve dwindled, they became sacred in a way. Here were these jars of preserved life; small monuments to attest for my grandmother’s existence, providing continued nourishment for her family long into her afterlife.

Brandy Pear Ingredients

Drawing inspiration from my grandmother’s perfectly preserved pears, I wanted to attempt the canning process myself, but with a slight twist. Her recipe was simple and traditional — just the humble pear preserved in a simple syrup. Now that fall has certainly settled in, I find myself craving baked goods and warm cups of tea, but how to translate that to pears? As I was rummaging through my cupboards looking for inspiration, my nose detected this amazingly rich and spicy aroma which turned out to be a homemade chai blend that my boyfriend had concocted the winter before. So I decided to experiment. I would make one batch of pears that were slightly more traditional with a lemon, ginger, and cinnamon syrup, and another batch with an orange syrup infused with the chai spice. Oh, and did I mention both would be spiked with brandy? Because, why not, right?

Boiled Jars

Having never preserved anything before, I started the lengthy process with a sense of fear in my heart. Fear is not an over exaggeration. As I set up my jars and prepared my towel lined canning station, I realized that my pot was too small to entirely cover my jars during the boiling and sanitizing process. The internet gods mentioned that I needed at least an inch of boiling water above the lids. Would my short and chubby pot suffice? Or would I be unknowingly preserving tiny batches of botulism to be given lovingly to family and friends come the holiday season? Several semi-frantic calls with my mother later revealed that my pot would be fine as long as I filled it up to the rim of the jars and kept the lid on to create steam. Thanks mom!

Orange Zest

After boiling all of my jars for about twenty minutes each, I took them out of the pot with my sterilized metal tongs and placed them upside down on a towel to dry. The next step was to process all of my pears. Since I didn’t want them to discolour while they were waiting to be boiled, I created a few water baths for them, spritzing a bit of orange juice in bowls of cold water and making sure to reserve the orange peel to be used later in my syrup. I then started to wash, peel, and quarter my eight pounds of pears. This took a long time!

Pear Processing

Ginger Lemon Cinnamon Syrup

After all the pears were nice and settled in their water baths, I started working on my first batch of syrup. For this I thinly peeled and sliced a knob of ginger, peeled the zest of a lemon, squeezed the juice into a measuring cup (I got just over a quarter of a cup) and topped it off with water until it was a full cup. After pouring this into a large pot I added another cup and a half of water, three cups of sugar, my ginger and lemon zest, and two sticks of cinnamon. The syrup needs to be brought to a boil and then simmered for about ten minutes before adding the pears. After the pears have been added, it is then brought back up to a boil and the pears only need to be in there for about five minutes, because any longer and they start to go soft.

Preserving Pears

The pears are then placed into the jars, and a quarter cup of brandy is added to each. I topped them up with the remaining syrup and screwed on the lids. I made sure not to do it too tight because they are going to be put back into the giant pot of water, boiling for another twenty minutes, and the built up pressure needs to be released.

Pouring Syrup

For the orange and chai spice batch, I followed the same basic procedure. I peeled the zest off of another orange, and squeezed the juice into a measuring cup. I got about a half cup of juice and topped it off with water until I was at a full cup. I added this to my pot, along with another cup and a half of water, three cups of sugar, the orange zest from two oranges, a handful of star anise, and the chai spice blend secured in a tea ball. My chai blend consisted of cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, and a bit more star anise.

Orange Chai Brandy Pears

After boiling the pears in the syrup, placing them in their jars, adding the brandy and syrup, and boiling for an additional twenty minutes, all was successfully preserved! After leaving them on the counter for 24 hours, I tightened the lids and then placed them in the darkness of my cupboard. I can’t wait to try them in a month from now once all of the delicious brandy and syrup has been absorbed, either on their own, or with some vanilla ice-cream.

Fresh Start

Hello!

I’m Katrina, nice to meet you, out there, whoever you are! This is what is known as the precursory First Post, which often strikes fear into the hearts of those trembling apprehensive types just starting out in the blogging world (a.k.a. me). I’ve decided to finally start a blog after years of lurking in the shadows of the internet, and a food blog at that! Yep, yet another drop in the massive food blog ocean. How will mine be any different? Well, I haven’t really gotten that far yet in the whole planning process… But! It will start by tracking my journey as I embark off to Chef School this week, which is tremendously exciting to the point of me having to stop and ask myself: “Wait. This is actually happening?”

It sure is! Here, let me tell you a bit about how I got to this point. About two years ago I graduated from the University of Toronto with a Specialists Bachelor’s Degree in English Literature. Which basically means I read sososo many books, more books than I had to in order to achieve your average ‘ol english degree. Why did I do this to myself? Because I’m obsessed with books! And writing about books! Particularly Canadian literature, which I love and adore and focused on for much of my time in school. After graduation, I decided to take a publishing course, because, well, it seemed like the obvious choice. If you love Canadian literature, why not work in the Canadian publishing industry? But that’s not exactly how things worked out. I finished my course, got my diploma, and landed an internship. Sounds like everything went according to plan, right? Well, the internship was at an educational publishing house, and I was doing a lot of emailing and spreadsheets, and it was not at all like how I envisioned it. I was hoping to work with authors, editing and developing manuscripts, or working with magazines, editing and developing content. Unfortunately, the only editing work I was getting was for accounting textbooks. So after feeling as though I had fallen off the proper track, I decided to take a break from the publishing world for a while. I took a job as a hostess at a vegetarian restaurant, and have spent the last year somewhat confused but slowly gaining perspective on what I really want in life.

So, you’re probably wondering what any of this has to do with going to chef school. Well, while I was at my internship, the one project that actually stirred my interest was working on the slideshow presentation for a chef training textbook. Watching the demonstration videos and seeing what the course was all about got me super excited! I would think to myself: “Oh man, I wish I was the one actually doing the cooking instead of just sitting in this windowless box watching someone else do it!” I guess you could say that was when the light bulb moment occurred, and I told myself that I should just go for it.

Besides books, my other true love in life has always been food and cooking. As a kid I would take my mom’s cookbooks and make plasticine recreations of the recipes, I was all over my EasyBake Oven, and I would even sneak down into the kitchen in the wee hours of the morning to experiment while my parents slept. Some experiments were successful, like the time I made a beautifully browned Irish soda bread for St. Patrick’s day, and others… not so much, like when I attempted to make caramel without a candy thermometer, horribly burnt the sugar on the bottom on the pot, and hid the evidence in the cupboards, only to be found by my dad months later! I took all of the classes that involved cooking in high school, I cooked in the itty bitty kitchens in residence to avoid the horrible meal plan food, I even took a fourth year seminar on food literature which had a cooking component to it where we got to prepare a meal for our class in the commercial kitchens of Hart House alongside of Chef Joshna (my group made a four course Mediterranean inspired meal which included hand made gnocchi and lemon soufflé for dessert). For me, going to chef school just seems like the next logical step.

I dream of being able to combine my love of books, food, and writing into one big happy, creative, and slightly eclectic career one day, and by writing this blog I hope to trace this journey as it begins to unfold.