This
is a really easy sauce. You can serve it hot or cold – hot I think
is preferable if serving with the fries. Cold works well if you're
tipping it over ice cream.
Goosegog
sauce
340g goosegogs
cold water to cover
55g unsalted butter – divided into
25g (melted) and 30g
Top and tail the goosegogs and wash well. Place in a medium
size saucepan (18cm diameter) and just cover with cold water – do
not drown! Cook the fruit gently and when it comes to a boil, reduce
the heat and cook until tender. Drain the fruit – you won't need
the liquid. Mix the drained fruit with a melted knob of butter –
25g. Tip the fruit into a sieve and press through, use the back of a
wooden spoon to help. Discard the remains in the sieve and tip the
fruit into a clean saucepan. Add half a teaspoon of caster sugar and
the remaining 30g of butter. Warm gently to dissolve the sugar and
melt the butter.
Useless bits of information that you might find interesting!
In the UK cookery books, particularly of a certain age, you come
across terms like “add a knob of butter” - I know what I'd add
but it occurs to me that there may be someone out there who is kind
enough to read this, who won't know.
A knob of butter is approximately 25g. I say approximately
because it does not have to be exact as it would be if you were
baking which, as we all know, is an exact science. If you look at
the goosegog sauce recipe, the butter is used to enrich the sauce so
a gram either way will not spoil your efforts.
Whilst I'm on the subject here's another term - “add butter the
size of a walnut”. The last time I saw I whole walnut was last
Christmas! You won't be surprised to learn that these terms go back
to the 1850s. It may be of course that walnut trees were quite
common then. Anyway butter the size of a walnut is approximately
30g.
Hey, you never know when this stuff might come in handy!
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