7 August 2010

it's that orange blossom special

I try to keep things relatively practical and user-friendly on here, but every now and then a recipe comes along which, even though I can't really work out what I'd do with it, sounds so pretty that I just go ahead and make it anyway. Like them marshmallows. Really, if I want to cook something badly it's pretty easy come up with some kind of justification, however dubious.


I found this recipe for Orange and Saffron Confit in the latest Dish magazine. I always thought confit was something submerged in fat for purposes of preservation and deliciousness, but this is basically slices of orange simmered in syrup. I guess it's for the best, although you know I wouldn't turn my back on orange slices in a jar of melted butter. It sounded like so much fun, and even though I didn't really have any need for it in my life I really wanted to try it.

It's pretty cheap to make, and even if you never, ever use them, the jar looks unbelievably pretty with its tangerine-bright layers of orange spooning in their glossy liquid.


Saffron is admittedly really expensive, and the reason I'm relaxed about using it is because I've received it as a Christmas or birthday present so many times (I looooove getting food as presents FYI) that I've got plenty I can use. If you don't have saffron to hand I reckon this would be amazing with a vanilla pod or a couple of cinnamon sticks (for a very cheap option) as a replacement.

Orange and Saffron Confit

From Dish Magazine (the current one with the pumpkin on the cover)

2 large seedless oranges (I used 3)
3 1/2 cups water (just under a litre)
Pinch of saffron threads, or whatever substitution you're using
2 1/2 cups caster sugar (I used regular)

Trim the ends off the oranges. Cut into 1/2 cm thick slices and place in a wide saucepan with the water and saffron threads. Bring to just below boiling point, let it simmer away gently for about 20 minutes. Then sprinkle over your sugar and continue to cook gently for about 30 minutes, until the liquid has reduced a bit. Occasionally you could spoon some of the liquid over the oranges but don't try stirring them or they'll fall apart.

Let them cool in their syrup, then carefully transfer the slices to a clean jar or two and pour over the remaining syrup.

Warning: You and your benchtop will get covered in sugary syrup. There is no way of avoiding this. This is what I've learned in my travels around the kitchen, anyway.


It smells so good while it's simmering away, and for very little effort you end up with soft, gleaming slices of intensely flavoured orange and a gorgeously golden syrup flecked with red saffron strands and fragrant with that grassy, saffron-y perfume.

In case you're thinking "yeah nice, but now what?", well apart from loudly admiring your handicraft whenever someone walks past, Dish suggests a few options for using this confit. These include decorating cakes, accompanying chocolate mousse, or serving over ice cream. For a while there I was thinking it would be fun to give someone you were only pretending to like a jar of this as a present, so you could imagine them fumbling round trying to (a) come up with a use for it and (b) act like they're sophisticated and orange confit is something they understand and deal with on a daily basis. However there's actually plenty of uses for this stuff. Today I decided to chop up a few slices to use in a fruit cake of Nigella Lawson's - but this cake is amazing on its own so don't feel that the first recipe here has to happen before you can do the following one.


And if you can't be bothered making the orange slices to go with this, take comfort in the fact that even though they look pretty, they make slicing the loaf a total pain.

Fruit Tea Loaf

From Nigella Lawson's very amazing Feast

1 x 250ml cup black tea
375g dried fruit (I used half dates, half sultanas)
125g brown sugar
250g plain flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
pinch ground cloves (I used cinnamon)
1 egg
Optional: 3 slices of orange from the above confit recipe, roughly diced, plus extra slices for decorating.

Make the cup of black tea (I used English Breakfast) and pour it into a bowl with the dried fruit and sugar, stir well, then leave sitting overnight. I know, I've just told you that you can't have this cake until tomorrow. If you've got a microwave, you can try blasting it in there for a little bit to speed up the absorption process, letting the fruit cool a little before doing the rest of the recipe.

Set your oven to 170 C, and line a loaf tin with baking paper. Beat the rest of the ingredients into the dried fruit (retaining the liquid) and then spoon the mixture into the loaf tin. Bake for around an hour or so. If you've got some orange confit kicking round, drape a few slices over the cake and spoon over a little syrup.

I can't even emphasise with words (only by gesturing wildly with my hands) how easy and delicious this cake is. If you haven't got much in the bank for baking fancy things, this is the cake for you - dried fruit like sultanas, dates and apricots are always cheap. There's no butter in it and only one egg. But it comes out of the oven tasting like one of those special Christmas cakes which have had days of effort and paychecks going into them. It's really moist and fruity and rich, and the orange slices lend a sunny zestiness. For all that people get up in arms about Nigella's recipes which have lots of expensive ingredients in them, if you take the time to properly read her books there's a complete goldmine of practical, cheap things to fill your stomach with. And come to think of it, this cake would make a genuinely lovely gift to someone, at any time of year.


I really hadn't thought about what I'd do with the slices of orange as I start cutting into the loaf. Guess I'll just have to try hacking them up as I go? Or maybe I could push them further and further back as I slice more off the loaf...but it looks pretty. Speaking of pretty, I am a bit in love with that plate of ours which (you can't see because there's a slice of cake on it) has a guy and a girl earnestly playing tennis. Picked it up for a dollar from an op shop in town. The joy I feel whenever I see it is dampened a bit by how old it makes me feel that I get worked up about really ugly plates.

Last night Tim and I went to an evening of Rogers and Hammerstein with the always-awesome NZ Symphony Orchestra and West End conductor Martin Yates, with songs performed by West End soloists Jacqui Scott and Andrew Halliday. It was a fantastic evening - Tim and I probably lowered the average age of punters by about forty years - but I will point out that the Michael Fowler centre is awful, with its semi-circular seating arrangement meaning that 40% of the audience can't see a thing, and for the price they were making people pay, you'd think Kerry Ellis or even Elaine Paige herself were going to be there.

The NZSO were in good form, providing a lush, expansive amble through some of Rogers and Hammersteins best-loved musicals, and songs like Shall We Dance, Some Enchanted Evening, Oklahoma, Climb Every Mountain, and Soliloquy were performed through the evening. The two singers were fantastic - Halliday had a rich and smooth Gavin Creel-esque sound and Scott was blessed with a powerful soprano voice. Gotta say even as a hardcore musical theatre person the Oklahoma can sometimes be a bit much for me - all that talk of how "birds and frogs'll sing altogether and the frogs'll hop". The darkness of Carousel is more my scene, and to their credit, without any costumes or scenery and only marginal context, the two singers were great at switching characters between songs. If anyone's listening, an evening of Sondheim would be seriously awesome. I probably wouldn't even complain about the price of seats.
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Title via: Johnny Cash, who sung Orange Blossom Special at Folsom Prison and San Quentin prisons. There is some incredibly good footage on Youtube of him performing, if you're ever sitting round wondering what to do with your time you could definitely do worse than entering his name into the search bar.
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Music lately:

King Kapisi feat Mint Chicks, Superhuman - a seriously meaty collaboration between two of Aotearoa's finest acts. I've been lucky enough to see both of them live (Mint Chicks at SFBH in 2006 and earlier this year, and King Kapisi at Pasifika Festival at Western Springs in 2000 or 2001, my memory fails me - anyone else remember?), hopefully there's the opportunity for people to see them perform this song together at some stage.

Speaking of collaborations, we're still loving Nas and Damian 'Jr Gong' Marley's diamond of an album, Distant Relatives. Truly. Find it.
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Next time: I made Nigella's Coca Cola chocolate cake today for an interview we did with Alex The Kid for 100sand1000s...will be blogging about it soon.

10 comments:

  1. The oranges look beautiful, what a lovely gift. I am on a bread thing at the moment, I'm sure I can figure out some way to get the two together?! I am with you, food gifts are the best kind, especially when it is something you have never used before....squid ink pasta anyone...?

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  2. I can definitely see that the confit is gorgeous, but my sad orange-averse heart can't make the leap to tastiness ;)

    However, that loaf looks amazing and right up my alley. Apricots and dates, I think! :)

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  3. the oranges look amazing.... wonder what it would be like if you put the orange slices at the bottom of the loaf tin before you poured the mixture in... so that they actually bake into the loaf... You could also serve the orange slice on a platge along side a slice - with a bit of yoghurt/cream/angelica/half a strawberry etc as garnishing. They would look very nice beside your preserved lemons,too.

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  4. Plum Kitchen: I bet they would work really nicely in bread- maybe in a kind of Italian bread (pannetone?) or in a brioche recipe.

    Hannah: Aw. I bet it would be gorgeous (and zingier) if you replaced the oranges with limes and/or lemons though!

    Mum: Good idea, I like the sound of the oranges on an upside down cake :D

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  5. TWO great things to make, yum. I'll file the confit away for Christmas, lots of friends would really like it and NOT wonder what to do with it (though every year I have fantasies about making gorgeous little foodie presents and almost never do...)

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  6. sweet n' sourAugust 09, 2010

    i was wondering if you could offer up a couple of recipes using lemons. i've been raiding my mothers two lemon trees that are heavy with fruit.... like seriously. we both have been making hot lemon, honey & ginger drinks for winter, but hardly making a dent on the tree. any suggestions?

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  7. AnneE: Do it! I bet people would love to receive them :)

    sweet'n'sour: Lucky you, with all those lemons! I made this lemony cake ages ago, it's really yum: http://hungryandfrozen.blogspot.com/2008/09/corn-as-high-as-elephants-eye.html

    Also I bet you could make the recipe from this post using lemons instead...there's also preserved lemons which are SO good

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  8. Wow, I am tempted by the sound of it too "orange and saffron confit", you just kind of know thats going to be good. I'm bookmarking this one.
    *kisses* HH

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  9. Sooooo it turns out a single orange slice from the jar, in a glass with ice, fresh mint, tanqueray and tonic is an absolute winner. I didn't have lemon or lime and was gagging for a gin - this was a gourmet addition and comes highly recommended!

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  10. Hi, I realize this is an old blog but I was perusing your list of recipes and this loaf looks perfect for taking to afternoon tea with the in-laws :) I feel like an idiot but when you say "(retaining the liquid)" do you mean retaining the liquid from soaking overnight and NOT including it in the recipe? Or including it in the recipe? I feel like it's not for using in the loaf but I just wanted to check... Your blog is amazing by the way :)

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