I was looking for a quick way to use up some prune plums to clean out the refrigerator, and while this recipe calls for the more readily available red or black plums, it looked like it would work with smaller fruit so I gave it a try. Despite the fact that the recipe calls them "stewed" you don't really have to cook them long at all, maybe 10 minutes at most (even less for prune plums since they are smaller) because you want them to stay mostly whole rather than turn into a mush. It's warm and comforting like applesauce but much easier because you don't have to peel or chop the fruit.
I ate them with sweetened whipped cream with just a bit of almond extract mixed in since almond and stone fruit tend to pair nicely. I also ate them with plain Greek yogurt for breakfast. Both were lovely. I loved their delicious sweet-tart flavor and definitely want to make this again as we head into fall and the temperatures start to dip.
Notes:
- I love these with a minimum of sugar, lemon, and cinnamon so as to let the fruit's flavor shine. The levels in the recipe were quite good but next time I may try just a tiny bit less sugar and lemon than it calls for. Edit: a tiny bit less sugar is fine but I'd definitely stick to the amount in the recipe for the best flavor.
- Because it's such a simple recipe, fresh squeezed lemon juice really elevates this. Definitely go to the trouble of getting a fresh lemon.
- If you don't have a cinnamon stick, about 1/4 teaspoon of ground cinnamon should be enough. You don't want to put in too much because its flavor gets slightly stronger as it stands.
UPDATE 10/15/19: Since coming home from Europe I have made two more batches of this (hi yes I am obsessed) with President plums, which look like prune plums but are bigger (still smaller than the standard black and red plums in US grocery stores though) because it seems prune plum season is done here. I tried them both halved and in quarters and found the quarters easier to eat, though for really small ones halves are fine. The President plums tasted good but I think the prune plums tasted better. I tried one batch with just nutmeg and while it tasted fine and I do like the combination of plums and nutmeg, I decided I greatly prefer it with at least some cinnamon. I wonder if the dessert I had in Germany might have contained a different type of cinnamon than I usually use. Maybe I'll try cardamom next? Or just leave well enough alone since I'd need to taste the German dessert again to know for sure what I was missing.
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RECIPE: Stewed Plums