I got a really good deal at the grocery shop the other day on some plums. A whole punnet for only 25 pence! How could I resist! We love plums! They were as hard as a rock, of course, but that is not a problem if you plan on cooking them, in a crumble or a cake . . . but I had something else in mind.
When you can't get good fresh plums in season however, this is an excellent way to prepare them. Poached plums.  Beautifully tender plums, with a lovely vanilla scented  and flavoured syrup spooned over top, with just a hint of lemon.
They are equally as good served with a dollop of tangy Greek Yoghurt or Creme Fraiche.
One bite and I was back in Austria where we holidayed one year . . . each morning they served us these lovely poached plums for breakfast, along with yoghurt and meusli. It was a gorgeously delicious and healthy breakfast.
One bite and I was back in Austria where we holidayed one year . . . each morning they served us these lovely poached plums for breakfast, along with yoghurt and meusli. It was a gorgeously delicious and healthy breakfast.
Poaching fruit is the perfect thing to do with supermarket fruit that you know will annoyingly rot before it actually ripens. Actually hard fruits are just wonderful done this way. It gives them new life. We like this with vanilla ice cream, but a dollop of Greek yoghurt or Creme Fraiche is always lovely too. You also don't need to keep the spices at just vanilla. Try using some bruised cardamom pods, cinnamon or cloves along with the vanilla!
8 plums, washed, cut in half and stoned
1 litre of water (4 cups)
190g  caster sugar (1 cup)
a strip of lemon peel, no pith
the juice of half a lemon
1/2 a vanilla bean, split lengthwise
a strip of lemon peel, no pith
the juice of half a lemon
1/2 a vanilla bean, split lengthwise
Place  the water, sugar, lemon peel, and lemon juice in a deep skillet,  just  large enough to hold all the plum halves in a single layer.  Bring  to  the boil.  Reduce the heat to a simmer.  Add the vanilla bean,  scraping  out the seeds into the mixture.  Simmer for about 5 minutes,  then add  the plums cut side down.  Simmer for about 3 minutes.  Flip  them over  and simmer for another 3 to 4 minutes, just until they have  surrendered  their firmness and absorbed some of the syrup.  They should  be just  tender to the tip of a knife.  Scoop the plums out immediately  to a bowl  and allow to cool to room temperature.  Cool the syrup down  as well.   Spoon the fruit into dessert bowls and spoon some cooled  syrup over each  serving.  Serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a  dollop of Greek  Yoghurt or Creme Fraiche.  Store any leftovers in the  refrigerator. 
I am so happy that lighter days are here and grateful for sunnier days as well. My food pictures turn out so much nicer!
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