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Fried Cox Apples with Cinnamon Sugar

Ingredients

  • 250g unsalted butter (A generous cup)
  • 1 cox's orange pippin apple per person, peeled and cored
  • lemon juice
  • 1 TBS caster sugar mixed with 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon per person
  • apple juice, cider, calvados or water for deglazing the pan
  • Creme Fraiche to serve
  • You
  • will need to clarify the butter first. Bring it to the boil in a small
  • pan and then strain it through a seive which you have lined with a
  • coffee filter, into a clean container. (Don't worry if you don't need
  • it all. Any leftover clarified butter can be kept in the
  • refrigerator.) Mix together the cinnamon and the sugar to have at the
  • ready.
  • Peel, core and slice each apple into eight wedges,
  • tossing them with lemon juice to help prevent them from turning colour.
  • Heat some of your clarified butter in a heavy based skillet. (The size
  • will depend on how many you are doing. Two apples fit just nicely into
  • my 8 inch pan.) Once the butter begins to foam lightly add the apple
  • wedges in a single layer. When the undersides of the apples just begin
  • bubble up and deglaze the pan. For two apples I used about 60ml or 1/4
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Summary

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Fried Cox Apples with Cinnamon Sugar

 

Recipe Summary & Steps

When we lived down South we were surrounded by beautiful orchards, the bonus in the autumn being we got to forage from the drops and I had no end of lovely apples and pears to do things with. We knew we would miss that so our first year back up here in Chester we planted our own fruit trees at the back of the garden. This year our Cox's Pippin tree gave us a bumper crop and I hear the gorgeous growing season we have just had has resulted in bumper apple crops all over the UK.

I just love cooking with and eating apples, and when you have grown them yourself it somehow makes it an even better experience!

Back to the recipe. I don't think you would need to use the actual apple recipe specified. Any good, firm eating apple would serve this purpose. A Granny Smith would probably work equally as well.

It uses simple ingredients . . . apples, butter, sugar, cinnamon . . . things most of us have in our kitchens at any given time. And it's easy and quick to throw together, which makes it the perfect recipe for entertaining, especially at this time of year with Halloween and Bonfire night coming up over the next few weeks. The beauty of this recipe is that it's seasonal, simple and can easily expand according to however many people you are feeding, which makes it the perfect dessert for sharing with your friends!

Speaking of which, have you checked out the Halloween/Bonfire night pages on Jamie Oliver There are all sorts of ideas there and I have bookmarked more than a few. Tasty offerings such as Toffee Apple Tart, Neeps & Tatties, frosted Butternut Squash Muffins. A lotta, lotta scrumminess there.

These tasty apples went down a real treat today . . . and I know this is a recipe I will make again and again. I love the simplicity of it. You get a lot of wonderful flavour for very little effort. I do hope you will give it a go and that you'll check out some of the other recipes too.

Oh, I do so love autumn and the wonderful food and tastes that it brings to our table! It's small wonder that it is my favourite time of year, taste wise . . . but then again . . . I say that about all the seasons! I am just a glutton I guess!

*Fried Cox Apples with Cinnamon Sugar*

Serves as many as you have friends

A deliciously easy recipe, using seasonal and simple ingredients from Kevin Gould and the Jamie Oliver page.

  • 250g unsalted butter (A generous cup)
  • 1 cox's orange pippin apple per person, peeled and cored
  • lemon juice
  • 1 TBS caster sugar mixed with 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon per person
  • apple juice, cider, calvados or water for deglazing the pan
  • Creme Fraiche to serve
  • You
  • will need to clarify the butter first. Bring it to the boil in a small
  • pan and then strain it through a seive which you have lined with a
  • coffee filter, into a clean container. (Don't worry if you don't need
  • it all. Any leftover clarified butter can be kept in the
  • refrigerator.) Mix together the cinnamon and the sugar to have at the
  • ready.
  • Peel, core and slice each apple into eight wedges,
  • tossing them with lemon juice to help prevent them from turning colour.
  • Heat some of your clarified butter in a heavy based skillet. (The size
  • will depend on how many you are doing. Two apples fit just nicely into
  • my 8 inch pan.) Once the butter begins to foam lightly add the apple
  • wedges in a single layer. When the undersides of the apples just begin

to turn golden, flip them over and sprinkle with the cinnamon sugar.

They will begin to caramlize quite quickly. Lift them into a dish and

then pour some of the liquid of your choice into the pan. It will

bubble up and deglaze the pan. For two apples I used about 60ml or 1/4

cup. Pour this over the apples and serve warm with some creme fraiche.

Delicious!

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