These very simple, very rich brownies with their pattern of swirling leaves are quick and spontaneous. They are a thing of the moment- lots of seasonal fruit (it is nearly impossible to buy a modest amount of produce in abundant Greece), bound with some kitchen staples, in the oven and out in no time. Pears and chocolate are delicious together- the sophisticated version of the chocolate cherry or strawberry, and their inspiration is a lot older. For me, the formal combination of Pear and Chocolate dates from the '80's, with my first of many, many Lindt with Pear Williams bars. Histrorically, it dates from Escoffier's classic (more mysterious by far than the Peach Melba- also Escoffier, and also for a Helen- Opera star Nellie Melba). Escoffier introduced Poire Belle Helene in honor of an Operetta- La Belle Helene- about Helen of Troy. Classic plated dessert, chocolate bar, brownie- it is hard to come across a combination of pears and chocolate that is not a rich and little intriguing like a crisp bite of fall.
We will need:
8 medium pears- here, Williams pears the size of a child's fist.
250 g/generous 1 C butter
100 g/ 1 C cocoa powder
425 g/ generous 2 C sugar
4 eggs
160 g/ 1 1/3 C flour
1/4 tsp. salt
Wash the pears, make thin slices from the sides of some, and dice the rest. Put them on parchment in a medium oven (170 C/350 F) with the fan on to let them concentrate and dry out a little as you assemble the rest of the ingredients. Line a large (25 x 28 cm. or 10" x 11") with non-stick parchment and set aside. In a pan large enough to combine everything later, melt the butter over low heat. Remove the pan from the heat, and blend in the sugar, cocoa, and salt.
Add the diced pear to the brownie batter. Scatter the slices over the top like leaves, and dust with a little coarse sea salt for sparkle- beautiful, and it really brings out the fruit.
Bake for about 30 minutes at 170 C/350 F (without the fan), until a toothpick comes out nearly clean.
They will slice better when cool. They're very lovely, and if you want to make more than a casual snack of them, a triangle with some cream ice cream on the side will bring them from lunch box to dinner party. The gritty texture of the pear breaks up the brownie's rich smoothness, wonderful together.
I love the concept of this dish, a combination of American and European.
ReplyDeleteSimple and yet it makes perfect sense.
Thank you! I hope you enjoy it. And thanks for stopping by- visiting your blog right now.
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