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Title : Comfort Me With Apples
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Comfort Me With Apples
Sustain me with raisins, comfort me with apples, for I am faint with love [Song of Solomon 2;5]I am the ancient apple-queen,
As once I was so am I now.
For evermore a hope unseen,
Betwixt the blossom and the bough.
Ah, where's the river's hidden Gold!
And where the windy grave of Troy?
Yet come I as I came of old,
From out the heart of Summer's joy
I do love this tapestry by Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne Jones - he stitched it to accompany the Pomona poem written by his friend William Morris.
This autumn seems to have been a good one for the apple harvest.
In his Lake Wobegon books, author Garrison Keillor describes the churchgoers in his little Minnesota town as all being both good, and generous gardeners. In the summer months, they arrive on Sundays with bags of tomatoes, seeking to pass on their excess harvest to others. But as they're all doing it, nobody is keen to take the produce. Consequently, they try and offload their glut by stealth. GK describes waking up to find 'bags of Christian tomatoes' left anonymously on the front porch!
Here at United Church Ferndown, we are similarly blessed by green-fingered benefactors- at the moment, it's cooking apples. The huge box was there again on Sunday - with a roll of bags beside it. Unlike GK's fictional Lutherans and Catholics, our congregation received the fruit with joy. It was heartening to see so many people leaving after coffee time, each clutching bags containing 4 or 5 apples. Some fruit had slight blemishes or bruising, but that's easy to remove.
Once we got home from church on Sunday, I prepared my fruit, and discovered I had enough for three little puds [so one went to Jim-next-door, who has a sweet tooth, and always enjoys a home-made treat]
I cheated with the custard, and made up a sachet of Lidl's instant sauce. I'd picked up a 'no-added-sugar' one, we've not had that before. Pleasant, but a surprisingly almond flavour, when I was expecting vanilla.
I have some little "Charlie Bigham" pie dishes - these are the perfect size for individual apple crumbles. CB's pies are very tasty, and you do get the lovely dish with them - but they usually retail around £7.50 -£8 for two. That's way beyond what I would pay for a pie. But I discovered that the Waitrose at South Mimms Services on the M25 stocks them. SM is midway between The Manse and Cornerstones, so we almost always stop there en route to and from Norfolk. Three times now, I've gone in to the shop late in the evening just as they are closing and picked up a pair of pies for around £2.50. Passing on this tip to anyone else who may travel that way! You can also buy the empty dishes [overpriced] on eBay, or find them sometimes in Charity Shops in posh High Streets.
Sometimes I think it would be lovely to have my own apple trees producing bumper harvests - but then I realise I'd probably end up like Diane Keaton, in the film Baby Boom, where she ends up working 24/7 in her steamy kitchen producing dozens of jars of applesauce.
Do you grow your own apples?
What is your favourite way of cooking them?
Do you have an unusual recipe to share?
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