Red Wine Poached Pears

  5.0 – 6 reviews  • Fruit
Level: Intermediate
Total: 13 hr 40 min
Prep: 40 min
Inactive: 12 hr
Cook: 1 hr
Yield: 6 servings
Level: Intermediate
Total: 13 hr 40 min
Prep: 40 min
Inactive: 12 hr
Cook: 1 hr
Yield: 6 servings

Ingredients

  1. 1 lemon
  2. 1 orange
  3. 1 bottle red wine (recommended: Shiraz/Syrah or Zinfandel)
  4. 8 cups water
  5. 1/2 cup honey
  6. 1 (1-inch) piece fresh ginger, sliced
  7. 1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns
  8. 1/2 teaspoon cloves
  9. 4 cardamom seeds
  10. 2 star anise
  11. 1 bay leaf
  12. 6 Bartlett pears, peeled
  13. Creamy Pistachio Nut Filling, recipe follows
  14. 1 1/2 cups mascarpone cheese
  15. 3 tablespoons sugar
  16. 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  17. 1/2 cup pistachios, coarsely chopped

Instructions

  1. Juice the lemon and orange, reserving the juiced citrus halves. Put the juice, citrus halves, wine, water, honey, ginger, black peppercorns, cloves, cardamom, star anise and bay leaf in a wide saucepot. Gently place the pears into the liquid. Make a circle of parchment paper that is 1/2-inch larger than the pot and cover surface completely with the parchment paper (see Cook’s Note*). Make sure the pears are fully submerged but not touching the bottom of the pot. Bring the poaching liquid and pears to a boil, then reduce the heat to just below a simmer.
  2. Cook the pears until fork tender. Test for doneness by inserting a sharp knife in the base; there should be little resistance when fully cooked. Gently transfer pears to a glass or ceramic bowl. Pour enough poaching liquid over pears just to cover. Cover and refrigerate for several hours, preferably overnight; the longer the pears soak, the darker they will become.
  3. Strain remaining poaching liquid and return to saucepan. Cook over high heat until a syrupy consistency is achieved or the syrup coats the back of a spoon. Chill until the pears are served.
  4. Use a parisienne scoop to remove each pear’s core, hollowing out a 1-inch wide cavity that starts at the base and extends 3/4 of the way up the pear. Transfer the Creamy Pistachio Nut Filling to a piping bag without a tip. Gently fill the pear cavity until it slightly overflows. (The overflow will help to provide a sticky surface to stand the pear up on.) Place the pear, base side down, in a bowl and surround with 1-ounce of the syrup. Serve.
  5. In a medium-sized bowl, cream the mascarpone, sugar, and vanilla together. Stir in the pistachio nuts.
  6. Use immediately or refrigerate and return to room temperature before filling the pears.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 203 calorie
Total Fat 0 grams
Saturated Fat 0 grams
Cholesterol 0 milligrams
Sodium 10 milligrams
Carbohydrates 42 grams
Dietary Fiber 6 grams
Protein 1 grams
Sugar 30 grams
Calories 203 calorie
Total Fat 0 grams
Saturated Fat 0 grams
Cholesterol 0 milligrams
Sodium 10 milligrams
Carbohydrates 42 grams
Dietary Fiber 6 grams
Protein 1 grams
Sugar 30 grams

Reviews

Jade Conley
I set a pear in a puddle of the reduced wine sauce, with a triangle of good bleu cheese set on end next to the pear, rather than using the filling in the recipe. I also add a bit of fresh ground black pepper to the sauce before I set the pear in it. This gets great reviews!
Joseph Benton
Beautiful and simple – I serve with rose infused Greek yogurt and a rose geranium leaf for a natural finish and appeal!
Karen Salas
After tasting the fluid the pears were soaking, I began to get nervous, thinking the pears would be “wine-y” and too strong for consumption. Boy was I wrong! They were perfect & the filling is a great accompaniment!
Donna Evans
This was so friggin’ awesome. The pears had a wonderful Christmasy sort of taste while the Mascarpone cream filling added depth that made mouths WATER. People were walking around coveting them, you’d swear they’d take a bite out of YOU if you tried to take it from them. This one is a HIT!
Jason Chase
What a wonderful fruit dessert! I made this on the spur of the moment, using ingredients that I had on hand (5 pears, finely chopped pecan praline instead of pistachios in the filling, and 3/4 of a bottle of shiraz wine). The results were wonderful. I did have filling left over which I plan to use tomorrow piped between small spice cookies.
Elizabeth Graham
this recipe feels simple to make, if you spread it over two days, and i loved it. i let the pears sit in their poaching liquid 24 hrs, and they were pinot noir gorgeous. an the filling was the one extra surprise!

 

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