Showing posts with label Málaga raisins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Málaga raisins. Show all posts

Saturday, November 25, 2023

MÁLAGA RAISINS—THE SWEETEST OF THEM ALL

 

In former days, when I still baked cookies and cakes for family, I would happily spend 15 minutes de-seeding Málaga muscatel raisins, the sweetest, juiciest raisins in the world. In those days, there weren’t any seedless raisins to be had.  Now, if I need raisins for a recipe, I reach for seedless sultanas. Not because they’re delicious. They are a place-holder. 


Inspecting the seasonal display of gastronomic treats for the holidays at my favorite hipermercado, I spied  packages of pasas moscatel, sin semillas, seedless muscatel raisins, I grabbed them, without checking the label. 

They were seedless and they were maybe better than the usual sultanas. But they were not the real Málaga raisins. On the label, I discovered that these came from Chile! The raisins are coated in oil, a common procedure in packaging raisins, to keep them from sticking together into a gigantic clump. 

Official DO label.
I pulled out a package of the real deal for comparison. Authentic Málaga muscatel raisins—Pasas de Málaga—have the official seal of denominación de origen protegida (DOP) or “protected designation of origin.” This authenticates their origin and quality. 

Their origin is in the hillside villages of the Axarquía,  east of Málaga city, plus a sub-category, Manilva, on the western edge of Málaga province. The grape varietal is the Muscat of Alexandria, which may have been first planted here by the Phoenicians, who settled in southern Spain after 800 BCE. Centuries later, the Greeks refined pruning methods. The Moors, colonizing Spain from the 8th century CE, expanded on the artisanal art of drying the fruit. 

The grapes are picked fully ripe and the bunches spread on drying racks positioned on slopes inclined towards the midday sun. They dry in 10 to 15 days. The raisins are snipped from the stems by hand and packed in wooden boxes for distribution. The DO raisins are not treated with sulfites nor coated in oil. 

Málaga raisins on the left.
I spread the DO raisins next to the seedless ones. The Málaga raisins are noticeably larger and plumper. They are softer and, on tasting, juicier. The flavor is winey, floral, grapey-sweet, whereas the others are just sweet. Yes, the Málaga raisins have seeds. I chewed them up with the fruit, a pleasant crunch. (In the photo, the DO Málaga raisins are center-left; the imported muscatel raisins are on the right.)

Here are tasting notes from the Foods and Wines from Spain website: Raisins from Málaga DOP Tasting notes
The raisins still retain the muscat flavor of the grapes from which they are obtained, reinforced by an intense afterflavor. Its characteristic sweetness is counteracted by its noticeable acidity, giving it a distinctive acid-sweet balance. Depending on their size, moisture content and characteristic Brix, the raisins have an elastic and supple feel and their flesh is meaty and juicy in the mouth, resulting in tactile sensations that are not normally produced by the dry, unsupple nature of most dried fruit. Their color is an even violet black. As the raisins come from a berry that has not been subjected to treatments that break down the skin, this is of medium texture. The raisins may have stalks if they have been picked by hand. They still have their pips inside, and these are considered to be an extra source of fiber.

The famed Málaga moscatel wine also is made here, dry, sweet, raisinified, and in various degrees of sweetness and color.

Here is a recipe for using muscatel raisins.

Tender pork tenderloin cooks in a muscatel raisin sauce. 

With the pork, sides of sweet potatoes and chard. The sweet potatoes, another Málaga specialty, are mashed with olive oil and a little orange juice. The chard is sautéed with garlic, pine nuts and Málaga raisins.


Pork Tenderloin with Muscatel Raisin Sauce
Solomillo de Cerdo con Salsa de Pasas de Málaga

If using authentic Pasas de Málaga DOP, you will not need to plump them by soaking. Any other raisin should be soaked in warm water before using. You do not need to remove seeds—unless you really want to. Balance the sweetness of the muscatel wine sauce with vinegar to taste.  

Serves 2-3.

½ cup Málaga muscatel raisins (2 ounces)
¼ cup warm water (optional)
1 pork tenderloin (18-20 ounces)
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 cup chopped onion
¼ cup chopped carrot
3 cloves garlic, chopped
½ cup sweet Málaga muscatel or PX wine
1 cup chicken stock
1 bay leaf
Sprig of thyme
1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar

Trim tenderloin.
Place the raisins in a small bowl and add the warm water. Let them soak 15 minutes.

Trim the tenderloin of sinewy skin. For convenience, divide the tenderloin in half. Season the pork with salt and pepper and allow it to come to room temperature.

Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a heavy skillet. Brown the pork on all sides on medium heat. Remove the meat when browned.

Add the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil to the skillet. Add the onion, carrot and garlic. Sauté them slowly until onion is softened and beginning to brown, 5 minutes. Add the Málaga wine. Cook off the alcohol. Add the stock, bay leaf and thyme. Cook the sauce, covered, until carrots are soft, 15 minutes. Discard the bay leaf and thyme. Puree the sauce in a blender with the vinegar.

Finish pork in sauce.

Return the sauce to the skillet. Add the raisins and the liquid in which they soaked. Bring to a boil and reduce heat. Place the pieces of tenderloin in the sauce. Cook them until the meat is just done (internal temperature of 150ºF), about 5 minutes. 




Remove the meat to a cutting board. Keep the sauce warm. Slice the tenderloins. If prepared in advance, the sliced pork can be reheated in the sauce. Serve the pork with the raisin sauce. 




More recipes with raisins:




Saturday, December 31, 2016

NUTS AND DRIED FRUITS FOR HOLIDAY TREATS

Frutos secos are nuts of all kinds, in Spain, as elsewhere, beloved at holiday time.

A bowl of walnuts and a nutcracker. Fruitcake studded with raisins, citron and nuts. Plum pudding with currants. Nuts and dried fruits are cherished for winter holiday treats.

In Spain, too. Frutos secos—all kinds of nuts and seeds—and frutas secas or desecadas—dried fruits add sweetness and cheer to a festive season. Almond confections such as turrón, nougat, and mazapán, marzipan candies, are the most emblematic. And there are many more.

Dried fruits are winter treats--bottom,´figs (dusted in rice flour), center, Málaga muscatel raisins, and top, dried apricots, called orejones or "little ears." Spain is known for figs and raisins. Apricots and dates are grown in Spain, but most are imported.

Walnuts--nueces--are grown in Spain, but most sold here come from California.

Pecans, known as nueces americanas or pecanas. I buy them from a chica in my aerobics class whose family has a pecan plantation not far from my village in southern Spain.

Almonds, almendras. I pick these in my garden. The ones on the right have been blanched, skinned and toasted.

Hazelnuts, avellanas, grown in Catalonia. They are an ingredient in the famous romesco sauce.

Pine nuts, piñones. Nut-bearing pine cones drop onto my patio from the tree that towers above it. I don't have the patience to crack the tiny nuts and extract the seeds, so I usually buy them. They are expensive.

Apricot-Almond Bars
Pan de Albaricoques con Almendras

Dense with fruit and nuts, sweet apricot bars are real energy bites.

This sweet is traditionally made with dried figs ground to a paste and mixed with almonds and sesame. It’s called pan de higos, or fig “bread,” although it’s not really bread nor is it baked. The confection can be made with any dried fruit—apricots, figs, raisins, prunes—or a mixture of fruits. It typically contains a shot of anise-flavored liquor, aguardiente or anis seco. You can leave it out or substitute a sweet wine such as PX or Málaga moscatel. 

This version, with apricots, contains flour, which keeps the mixture crumbly rather than sticky. It’s finished in the oven to cook the flour.

Serve thin wedges of apricot bars with mild fresh goat's cheese.

Serve the fruit loaf like candy, cut into very small pieces. It combines well with mild fresh goat cheese. Serve a sweet wine with it.

Grind the apricots in a food processor or meat grinder. I used a mini-processor, dividing the apricots and flour into three batches.

Plump Málaga muscatel raisins are the sweetest in the world. However, they must be de-stemmed and seeded. Dip fingers and knife tip in flour to prevent seeds from sticking.

Paste of ground apricots.
1 pound dried apricots
¾ cup flour
½ cup Málaga muscatel raisins, seeded
½ cup coarsely chopped walnuts
2 teaspoons sesame seed
1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
Dash of ground cloves
2 tablespoons honey
1/3 cup hot water
1 tablespoon anis seco (anisette)
1 cup almonds, skinned and toasted
Oil to grease the mold


Cut the apricots into quarters and sprinkle them with the flour. Grind them in a food processor, dividing into batches, if necessary. Place the apricot pulp in a bowl. Add the raisins, walnuts, sesame, zest and cloves. Dissolve the honey in hot water. Mix it into the fruit mixture with the anis liquor.

Preheat oven to 325ºF. Oil an 8-inch round or square cake pan and line it with baking parchment.

Press apricots and almonds into mold.

Spread half of the fruit mixture in the pan, pressing it firmly. Place half of the almonds on the fruit layer and press them into the paste. Place remaining paste on top and press it into an even layer. Place remaining almonds on top.

Bake the fruit loaf 30 minutes. Allow to cool in the pan. Loosen the sides with a knife and turn out onto a cutting board or plate. (Baking parchment may be removed or left in place.)

Cut the loaf into thin wedges (round pan) or squares (square pan) and place them on a candy dish.




Wrap wedges of the apricot bars in plastic film. What a nice hostess gift!

More recipes with nuts and dried fruits:
Squab stuffed with raisins, apricots and walnuts.
Roast stuffed chicken.
Turkey breast with spinach-walnut stuffing.
Walnut torte.
Fig roll (pan de higos).
Layer cake with apricots and marzipan.