Showing posts with label prickly pear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prickly pear. Show all posts
Monday, August 22, 2016
Prickly Pear Lemon Bars
Today I bring you prickly pear lemon bars. They're a great way to use up a bit of prickly pear juice, and they're a fun twist on classic lemon bars. I've made these a few times and have received many compliments from people who normally find lemon bars to be too sweet and puckery, but like the milder sweetness and balance of flavor found in these bars.
Initially, I was suspicious of how well pecans would go with prickly pear, but I trusted the recipe and went for it, and I must say these flavors play together exceedingly well. The pecans add a lovely richness and...well...nuttiness that helps balance the tartness and sweetness of the dessert.
Prickly Pear Lemon Bars
Yield: one 9 x 13 pan (halve the recipe for an 8 x 8 pan)
Adapted slightly from Cupcake Project
Crust Ingredients
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup finely chopped pecans
1/2 cup butter, slightly softened
Filling Ingredients
1-1/3 cups sugar
4 egg whites
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 to 1-1/2 tsp. lemon zest
1/4 cup lemon juice
1/4 cup + 2 Tbsp. prickly pear juice
1 tsp. baking powder
2-4 Tbsp. powdered sugar (for dusting)
Directions
Preheat oven to 350. Spray a 9 x 13-inch pan with cooking spray.
Use a pastry blender, forks, or a food processor to combine all the crust ingredients until crumbly. Press into your baking dish. Bake for 15 minutes.
Mix together all filling ingredients except powdered sugar (I use an electric hand mixture). The mixture will be really runny. This is good.
Pour filling mixture on top of the pre-baked crust. It's perfectly fine if the crust is still hot. Bake for 20 minutes, until filling is set. Let cool completely. Dust with powdered sugar, then cut into squares and serve.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
The Most West Texas Meal Ever

--
- Working at a chicken factory.
- Hauling furniture.
- Doing the grunt work that no one else wanted on a construction site.
- Scraping up bird poop.
- Running a hostel…which required scraping up human poop.
- Taking inventory in various warehouses.
- Unpaid youth minister at a church that never realized I possessed actual skills.
- Painting houses…in the Texas summer.
- Cashier at a fish and chips shop in an Aboriginal war zone.
So when Karissa suggested we include yucca in our gourmet feast, I couldn’t have been happier. (That is, once a quick Google search confirmed people actually eat yucca and she wasn’t just trolling me.) This would be my revenge. This would right an ancient wrong, rebalancing the scales of justice in favor of the downtrodden. Yucca did me dirty; now, yucca would be my lunch.
The yucca would just be a side dish, though. Initially, Karissa wanted to make prickly pear barbecue sauce, which sounded rad to me. Of course, what good is barbecue sauce without meat to go under it? Most people, when faced with this scenario, would content themselves with a pork roast. Not us. Karissa said, “I have some wild boar in the freezer.” Yes. Yes.
So our feast would be wild boar with prickly pear barbecue sauce and a side of yucca. This is also known as the most west Texas meal ever.
Wild Boar with Prickly Pear Tequila Barbecue Sauce
Wild Boar Directions:
- Eat a pineapple for breakfast.
- Vertically slice up 1 red onion and spread it around the bottom of the crockpot.
- If you have a kitchen slave or a butler, have them gently and methodically massage salt and pepper deep into the boar meat. Lacking either, simply salt and pepper the surface of the meat, then place it in a skillet on high heat to get a good sear on all sides.
- Place the wild boar meat inside the crockpot on top of the onion layer. Then add 1 whole red onion (peeled) to let it bask in the glorious essence of the wild boar. If you are cooking the boar’s head, place the onion inside the boar’s mouth.
- Add 1 cup of hot water.
- Lay the entire pineapple core from breakfast lengthwise inside the crockpot against the boar meat. Scatter additional pineapple fragments around the meat surface. Cook on high for four hours.
- If pressed for time, you may cut the meat into two or three chunks so as to expedite the cooking process. As an added bonus, this creates ideal cavities for the pineapple core and fragments.
- Don’t be a n00b – coat the inside of the crockpot with canola oil so your butler won’t have to spend an hour cleaning it. He needs to be answering the door.
3 medium red onions (two of these are already cooking in the crock pot with the boar)
1 Tbsp. canola oil
1-1/2 cups prickly pear juice
3 Tbsp. unsalted butter
Scant 1/2 tsp. ground coriander (or 1/2 tsp. coriander seeds, ground)
Scant 1-1/2 tsp. ground cumin (or 1-1/2 tsp. cumin seeds, ground)
1 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes
2 jalapeno chilies, minced, ribs and seeds removed
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 tsp. lime zest*
1/2 cup white Worcestershire sauce**
1/2 cup tequila
1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
2 Tbsp. lime juice***
2 tsp. kosher salt
*For the n00bs, that’s when you shave off the green stuff from the lime peel but not the white stuff. It’s a pretty thin layer, so don’t go nuts.
**We didn’t have white Worcestershire sauce, because West Texas, so we substituted with the following: 1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce, 1/4 cup + 1 Tbsp. white wine, 2 Tbsp. apple cider vinegar, and 1/4 tsp. sugar.
***I juiced the lime I used for the zest and it came out to exactly 2 Tbsp. Boo yah!
Sauce Directions:
- Remove onions from crockpot, both whole and sliced, discarding any charred bits. Place in blender with prickly pear juice and blend at high speed until completely smooth.
- Mince remaining red onion. Pro tip: Light a candle and keep it near the chopping station. It’s the sulfur in the onion that irritates your eyes, and the open flame burns the sulfur away. Your butler will thank you; your kitchen slave won’t, as they have not been granted permission to speak.
- Heat 1 Tbsp. of butter in a saucepan or large skillet over medium heat. Sauté minced onions until lightly caramelized (about 5 minutes). Add coriander, cumin, pepper flakes, jalapeno, garlic, and lime zest. Cook until fragrant. Pro tip: The recipe recommends “cooking until fragrant” for two minutes, but we say a minute should do. Garlic burns easily, and you don’t want to burn your garlic. That would be sad.
- Add Worcestershire, tequila, cider vinegar, and lime juice. Cook over medium-high heat until volume is reduced by half.
- Stir in the onion/prickly pear blend and salt, bringing to a simmer.
- Remove from heat and swirl in the remaining butter.
Ingredients:
4 yucca roots (we did 2 yuccas and ended up with twice as much sauce as we needed.)
1 tsp. salt
Juice from 1 lime
6 garlic cloves, mashed
1 tsp. salt, doesn’t have to be kosher. Anarchy!
1/3 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup olive oil
1 chopped red onion
Directions:
- Peel and cube yucca. Cubes must be the exact size of gaming dice, complete with rounded edges and dots etched into each face. Otherwise you fail at dinner. And life. All your loved ones will abandon you. You will be Gollum.
- Be sure to remove woody fibers that may be running down the middle of the yucca.
- Place yucca in saucepan and cover in water. Add salt and lime juice, then bring to a boil.
- Reduce heat, cover, and simmer until tender (approximately 30 minutes).
- Drain and keep warm.
- Fire your butler; he’s doing a terrible job.
- Mash garlic. Add garlic, lemon juice, and onions, and oil in the same pan you used for boiling. Because you no longer have a butler to wash extraneous pans.
- Heat until bubbling, then add the yucca to the pan, sautéing over medium heat until barely brown – but not CRISP! (Note: the recipe was very adamant about this. The all-caps crisp came straight from off the recipe page. If the yucca gets crispy, I can only assume the apocalypse is upon us.)
Expectations were astronomical. Could the reality of this meal live up to the hype? In a word, yes.
For those of you who grew up in the jungle, yucca reminded us both of taro, a tuber that serves as a staple in the Papua New Guinean diet. (If you didn’t grow up in the jungle, I’m not going to clarify that; you just get to feel left out. Look, just cook up some yucca and try it for yourself.) The sauce was a unique blend of flavors unlike anything I’ve tasted before – and it packed a late kick. We both agreed that next time we might cut back on the pepper flakes and/or jalapeno to make it a bit less spicy. It wasn’t too spicy to be enjoyable though; not by a long shot. We’re just white. And the wild boar was wild boar. Enough said.

Most importantly, I established my dominance over the yucca. I remain at the top of the food chain, with the yucca holding company with the likes of chicken and sushi. Actually, sushi is higher than yucca. Sushi eats yucca. It’s science.
Here’s a picture of Karissa’s cat. I think that’s how we do it on her blog.
LATER EDIT: Karissa fried up some leftover yucca a couple days later, which left it a little crispy on one or two sides. She declared it better this way. Pro tip: Never believe the recipe.
Recipe credit: This recipe served as the guide for the boar and sauce, and this one for the yuca/yucca.
Labels:
main dish,
oven-free,
prickly pear,
recipe,
side dish
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Prickly Pear Lemonade (or Limeade)
There are few beverages that feel as summery as lemonade. So in honor of the weather warming up (thank you, Texas, for the gloriously cool May!) and because there’s still a whole lot of prickly pear juice in my freezer (oops, didn’t mean to hoard it so stingily) I bring you prickly pear lemonade.
If you aren’t into harvesting prickly pear fruit, just use some other fruit juice. Maybe some peach nectar or pureed/mashed blackberries?
And for the record, I use the bottled Real Lemon and Real Lime juices. Because really, who has time—and wrist strength—to juice that many lemons?
Prickly Pear Lemonade (or Limeade)
Yield: 1/2 gallon
Ingredients
3/4 to 1 cup sugar
1 cup prickly pear juice
3/4 cup lemon juice
1/4 cup lime juice
Water and ice
Directions
In a glass measuring cup, combine sugar with some water. Microwave for about a minute, so the water gets warm enough to dissolve the sugar. Then pour sugar water into a half-gallon pitcher or mason jar, along with the prickly pear juice, lemon juice, and lime juice. Fill the pitcher the rest of the way with ice and cold water.
To make limeade: Simply switch the lemon and lime juice measurements. I like the limeade slightly better with 3/4 cup sugar and the lemonade slightly better with 1 cup sugar.
Labels:
drinks,
oven-free,
prickly pear,
recipe,
summer
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Lemon-Orange Pancakes with Prickly Pear Syrup
If you don't have access to prickly pears (or the inclination to process them yourself for juice), I would recommend using raspberries or blackberries for the syrup. Raspberries are probably the closest in flavor (and color) to the prickly pear. For suggested directions, see my notes in the syrup recipe.
I admit I was a little weirded out by the ricotta in these pancakes. I associate ricotta with lasagna, and I definitely don't associate lasagna with pancakes. But ricotta is actually pretty neutral-flavored, so it added some substance to the pancakes, and they turned out fluffy and delightful.
Lemon-Orange Ricotta Pancakes
Adapted slightly from Prevention RD
Yield: 4 servings (3 pancakes each)
Ingredients
1 cup all purpose flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
3-1/2 Tbsp. sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. baking soda
1 cup milk (I used 2%)
3/4 cup low-fat ricotta
3 eggs
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
Zest of 1 navel orange (about 1 Tbsp.)
1/4 cup lemon juice
2 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
Directions
Whisk together all dry ingredients in a mixing bowl--flours, sugar, baking powder, salt, and baking soda. In a separate bowl, whisk together milk, ricotta, eggs, vanilla, orange zest, and lemon juice. Add the melted butter, whisking as you add it. It may curdle a little as bits of the butter re-solidify. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients, and whisk to combine, being careful not to overmix.
Toward the end of measuring and adding ingredients, heat a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. If desired, spray lightly with a neutral-flavored cooking spray.
Scoop a scant 1/3 cup of batter onto the skillet for each pancake. Cook 2-3 minutes or until bubbles develop on the surface of the pancakes. Flip and cook another 2-3 minutes until cooked through and nicely browned.
Tip: As you finish each skillet of pancakes, stick your plate of finished pancakes in the microwave to keep them warm. Don't turn on the microwave or anything--but the small enclosed space will keep the pancakes nice and warm.

Yield: About 2/3 cup syrup
Ingredients
1/3 cup prickly pear juice
1/3 cup water
1/3 cup sugar
1-1/2 tsp. lemon juice
1 tsp. cornstarch
Directions
Whisk all ingredients together in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over medium to medium-high heat. Cook for 5-10 minutes at a relatively low boil (my burner was probably on medium), whisking fairly often. The goal is for the syrup to reduce in volume and thicken without scorching. The flavors will develop as it it thickens and reduces. Remove from heat and serve.
Notes
This syrup would also be great on waffles or french toast. The prickly pear and lemon make this a very brightly flavored syrup, and I could see it pairing beautifully with the kinds of flavors that would go well with raspberries. Perhaps with some slight modification, this could be lovely as a glaze on blueberry or lemon poppy seed muffins.
If you don't have access to prickly pears, try this syrup with raspberries or blackberries. I'd suggest starting with 2/3 to a full 1 cup of fruit. Puree it well, then strain through a fine mesh strainer to remove the seeds and pulp from the juice. Then use 1/3 cup of that juice in the recipe above.
Labels:
breakfast,
oven-free,
prickly pear,
recipe
Saturday, August 16, 2014
If Peter Piper Picked a Peck of Prickly Pears . . .
I've lived in Texas for 21 years and, as of this weekend, 11 of those years have been in west Texas. In those 21 years, I cannot tell you how many prickly pear cacti I've seen. Only within the last few years did I learn that both the fruit and the cactus pad are edible (for humans). And earlier this week, I got to help pick and process fresh prickly pear fruit for the first time in my life!
Some of my friends own a good chunk of land that is bursting with prickly pears. They've harvested and processed several batches, and this week invited me to come along and pick with them.
It was so much fun! For this gal who is much better at driving to the grocery store than growing or hunting her own food, there was something so invigorating about harvesting produce from the earth's bounty. I felt industrious and accomplished. And the juice I brought home seems all the more special because it was mine and my friends' hands who picked, chopped, boiled, mashed, and strained the fruit that produced it.
So today I bring you a prickly pear photo story / instructions for making your own prickly pear juice. At the bottom, I'll provide some ideas for ways to use prickly pear juice.
1. Gather up your tools. For harvesting, you'll need bucket(s) and long-handled tongs. Sturdy rubber gloves will also come in handy (no pun intended). For processing, you'll need a rake (like you use to rake leaves), at least two large pots, cutting board and knife, a colander, a potato masher, a ladle, a funnel with a strainer (or a funnel plus a small fine strainer), and jars to hold and store the juice.
2. Use the tongs to pick the fruit. Look for fruit that is darker in color--deep purpley red more so than bright pink.
3. Fill up as many buckets as your heart desires. Each gallon of fruit will yield roughly a gallon of juice.
4. I didn't get a picture of this step. To remove the small hair-like prickles from the fruit, dump them in batches onto your lawn. Use a rake to rake over them, jumble them up, etc. The idea is to knock most of the prickles off the fruit in the process. Some people recommend removing the prickles by burning them off with propane, but that sounds quite complicated. Also, just know that you're probably not going to get ALL of the prickles off. So wearing gloves in the next steps will result in fewer prickles going into your hands. Return the fruit to a bucket, trying to minimize the amount of grass and dirt that wind up mixed in with the fruit.
5. Rinse off the fruit, and cut it in half long-ways. Isn't it purty?
6. Fill up a pot with the halved fruit, then add enough water to just cover the fruit.
7. Bring to a boil over high heat, then boil for 10 minutes.
8. Toward the end of the 10 minutes of boiling, use a potato masher to mash up the fruit
9. Place a colander over a second large pot, and pour the fruit/water/juice into the colander. (As you can see, we used a large bucket since all of our pots were full of fruit.)
10. Use the potato masher to press the fruit well, squeezing out as much juicy goodness as possible. Discard the solids. You'll end up with some seeds in your juice; that's okay because we're about to strain them out.
11. Use a ladle and funnel (and fine strainer) to transfer juice into jars while straining out the seeds. If you plan to use the juice right away, feel free to fill each jar to the brim. However, if you plan to can or freeze the juice, be sure to leave about an inch at the top of the jar to allow for expansion.
So! Now for some ideas on what to do with the 3-1/2 gallons of prickly pear juice currently hanging out in my fridge and freezer.
- Frozen treats like sorbet and popsicles
- Today for breakfast I made Lemon-Orange Pancakes with Prickly Pear Syrup (recipe coming soon!).
- Various prickly pear-infused beverages, whether spiked or not. I've tasted prickly pear lemonade, and am told the juice is also excellent in iced tea, margaritas, and mimosas.
- Smoothies--paired with fruits like orange and banana
- Jelly
- Glazed roasted pheasant from this site (could easily be made with chicken or Cornish game hens)
- Salad dressing
- I found a wealth of prickly pear juice recipes on Yummly. Two of the recipes there that most intrigue me are the Prickly Pear Lemon Bars and the Coconut Tarts with Prickly Pear Sauce.
Labels:
oven-free,
photography,
prickly pear,
random,
summer
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