Bonjour mes amis!
I LOVE pineapple. Its punkish look. Its alluring perfume as it sits on your kitchen counter. How it's assembled like no other fruit. And of course its super sweetness. I only started buying fresh pineapple recently, but I used to watch my mother cut them up at home. To remove what we called its 'nails' in Chinese, she used a spiraling diagonal pattern of small wedges along the exterior to minimize flesh loss. She would toss the fruit in stirfries, but more than a few pieces would stealthily make their way into our mouths before they could hit the wok.
Intimidated by whole pineapples? Just choose the ones that look the yellowest (outside) and smell the sweetest. Yes, bring them up to your nose and sniff. I like to use that technique on fruits like strawberries and peaches as well. If it smells like nothing, there's a better chance that it will taste like nothing. But even if the pineapples at the store all look greenish and smell like not much of anything, roasting is a great way to bring out some hidden flavour.
It's very simple to learn how to disassemble them. The simplest technique is to slice off the top and bottom, then remove its outer skin by sitting it on its bottom and slicing off as minimal skin as possible to expose the flesh while removing the diamond pattern of the 'nails'. Next, cut the pineapple into four quarter wedges (lengthwise). This exposes the fibrous cylinder that runs down the middle of the fruit - the core. Cut down each quarter to remove the core. I like to then halve the quarters (lengthwise) into eighths and slice those pieces into small pieces easily handled with a fork or toothpick. And that is how one dissects a pineapple.
How did the concept of roasting a pineapple come about? I try to be somewhat environmentally conscious when I'm cooking - for example, I will commonly plan so I have roast-able vegetables (e.g. eggplant, yams, garlic) to go with a baked main or if I'm making bread just to maximize all that oven heat. This time, I was roasting a chicken and I had a pineapple from Jewel (bought on sale, of course), so I looked up some pineapple-in-oven recipes. The easiest method seemed to be to roast the entire thing whole. So I did.
Definitely a recipe to repeat. It came out exceedingly juicy, with a completely different flavour profile from its raw state (especially near the skin) due to the roasting. That's a little five spice powder sprinkled on top to give it the oomph factor, but I've put down some suggestions below for other things you might add to bring in the ooh la las.
It made a great accompaniment to the Sunday comics the next day with yoghurt, banana chunks and frozen blueberries.
Recipe:
- 1 pineapple
- something(s) to dress it up - cinnamon, brown sugar, five-spice powder, ginger powder, rum, ice cream, whipped cream, coconut, yoghurt, honey, maple syrup
- Cut off the top so that the leaves don't burn.
- Place pineapple into a baking dish.
- Put the entire thing in the oven for an hour at 350Cish. If you happen to be baking something else at a different temperature, just put it in at that temperature and adjust the time up to 15 minutes shorter or longer.
- After cooling it a bit - cut it up, cut out the core and skin, dress it and serve. I cut it into ~1 inch rounds and then quarters before coring it.
Thinking beyond dessert and breakfast, this would probably also pair nicely with savoury dishes, such as diced into a salsa or served with a pork or duck dish.
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