Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Pear as a Symbol

"The purpose of art is expression. Expression is a process of sending ideas. Art is any recorded experience that draws us back to it, holds us there, grows inside us, becomes part of us..."
-C.W. Fisher, from the blog The Purpose of Art


Pear by fjuk, a rather sexy use of the fruit

To better understand the kind of relationship human culture has with the pear, I thought that I would begin my journey by reading into the non-culinary or agricultural purposes it serves us. As described in the above quote, art has often been used to get snapshots of human culture, where the prominent pieces of an era are captured in something as simple as a still life painting of a bowl of grapes next to the dead pheasant. In The Pear in History paper from Purdue University, Janick describes how the pear has appeared in literature and art as early as the 9th century BC, mentioned in Homer's famous epic, The Odyssey.

The four trees of Paradise, 6th century mosaic from Jordan (pear in top right corner) 
Pear, pere, poire, peer, paere, paron, pera, pirne, apios, li, nashi... each culture that has admired and used the pear as a food crop not only has their own word for it, but also attached their own symbolism. In general, fruits are attributed to the Greek god Dionysus in Western culture, known for his delight in all earthly pleasures- food, alcohol, and sex. The pear is a particularly erotic example,  echoing the shape of women. Christianity certainly reinforces this association with the temptation in the Garden of Eden, which is traditionally associated with the apple, though the snake could have very well offered a pear, fig, or pomegranite... oddly enough, the pear is also connected with Christ's unbiased love for humanity.

Basket of Pears, mosaic in Museum of El Djem in
The House of Africa in Tunisia, North Africa
Asian cultures particularly hold the pear tree in high regard, connecting themes of innocence, longevity, grace, and nobility. The heart shaped white blossoms are thought to be symbolic of a young woman's beauty and purity, but also of transience and sad departure as the petals come and go in such a short time. The Chinese word for pear, li, is also the same word for seperation, so it is not advisable for friends or lovers to share halves of a pear for fear of being seperated...

Whether this is true, I tend to insist that a friend have their own pear instead of sharing one together.






Resources:

Fisher, C.W. "The Purpose of Art." BC: Blog Critics. Blog Critics Magazine, 05 14 2004. Web. 3 Oct. 2013. http://blogcritics.org/the-purpose-of-art/.

Fjuk. Pear. 2006. Array. Deviant ArtWeb. 29 Oct 2013.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Culinary Appreciation of the Pear


Now, this is familiar territory for me. I couldn't wait to have a reason to be in the kitchen- performing acts of gastronomic alchemy on pears, transforming them into sweet, melting desserts or rich, savory dishes.

Roasted Sugar Glazed Pears from SAVEUR magazine... food porn if I ever saw any
I've been lucky to have found several varieties of pears available at the Hunger Mountain Coop in Montpelier, Vermont. Scott Farm, a local orchard based in Dummerstom, Vermont, offered a few that I've been dreaming of trying since I first read about them: Seckel, Bosc, and Magness. Of course, I bought the obligatory West coast Bartlett that I'd grown up eating out of hand and in syrupy canned slices, and completely passed over the Red Anjou (my memory brings back a juicy but one dimensional sweetness). My interest in not in the ordinary, but for comparision's sake, I will eventually get a hold of one...

A great site called Pear Panache, supported by the nonprofit trade association Pear Bureau Northwest, had tons of professional advice and recipes from chefs around the world. It's probably my favorite one so far, with humorous subheadings that say "Become One with the Pear" or "We'd Sing an Ode to Pears, but Our Mouths Are Full".

Some basic guidelines follow the use of pears:

1) Select an appropriate variety that will be able to stand up to whatever you do to it. Some hold up better than others or fall apart in just the way you hoped they would.

2) If using raw, be patient and allow the fruit to ripen in a paper bag or similar dark space. A day can make all the difference in the world how you experience the texture and flavors of a pear! Check for ripeness by pressing your thumb into the neck underneath the stem for a slight softness.

3) Any recipe using apples can be substituted for pear, utilizing warm aromatic spices such as ginger, cinnamon, star anise, and clove. They can be baked, grilled, sliced raw into salads, poached, and pureed ad infinitum.

4) Raw pears begin to oxidize soon after they're cut into, so if the appearence is important they can de dipped into lemon juice.

5) As a personal preference, I like to keep the pear's shape in tact so people know what is waiting for them on the dish and don't mistake them for apples. The shape is unmistakeable and should remain that way!

After considerable research, I selected two savory and three sweet recipes that I found on the websites of Saveur and Epicurious magazine. I've already prepared and documented two with great success, that I will further elaborate on in upcoming posts.

Well, okay, I actually picked a huge list with like twenty recipes, but I won't blog about them all because I'm just really excited about showing off. This may be a clinical case of fruit monomania...

My selections...

Pear and Stilton Tart with Carmelized Onions
Pork Tenderloin with Sauteed Pears in a  Brandy Cream Sauce
Pear Tarte Tatin
Torte di Pere (Bittersweet Chocolate and Pear Cake)
Pear Clafoutis
Garnet Poached Pears with Marscapone

References

Koenig, Leah. "One Ingredient, Many Ways: Pears." SAVEUR.com. Saveur, 8 Sept. 2011. Web. 10 Oct. 2013. <http://www.saveur.com/article/Kitchen/One-Ingredient-Many-Ways-Pears>.

Pear Panache. Pear Bureau Northwest, n.d. Web. 10 Oct. 2013. http://www.pearpanache.com/.

Rooney, Beth. "Roasted Sugar-Glazed Pears." SAVEUR.com. Saveur, 9 Nov. 2012. Web. 08 Nov. 2013. <http://www.saveur.com/article/Recipes/Roasted-Glazed-Pears>.

Friday, October 4, 2013

The Beginning of a Long Term Relationship

Loot from suburban foraging as a sophomore in high school
What compelled me to select the European pear, or Pyrus communis?

Aside from having nibbled on Bartletts from the grocery store, or eaten syrupy canned slices, I hadn't seriously considered the pear as a crop worth exploring until one day in high school when I took a different route home.

Turning onto Freedom Way, I instantly noticed the pear tree dominanting the front yard of small white house. Spending a great deal of my childhood driving down dirt roads with my grandmother in search of fiddleheads and wild berry batches trained me to have hawk eyes for freegan opportunities. It was late September, and I could smell the ripe and rot of the small yellow pears in the yard and smashed on the sidewalk. There were still small green fruit dangling from the graceful, sweeping limbs. I didn't hesitate to walk right up to the front door to knock and ask if they didn't mind me harvesting enough fruit to fill the milk crate fixed onto the back of my bicycle.

The homeowner answered the door with a baby on her hip, and said to help myself since her family didn't know what to do with them. I left with at least 12 lbs. piled into my backpack and bike basket, and overwhelmed my family with fruit salads, smoothies, and other uncreative uses of the pear for the following week.

It was far more exciting to have come upon a pear tree than anything else I'd found in town. Perhaps what made it feel like a real treasure (did anyone else notice this bounty?) was how rare the pear stood among the countless apple trees that grow wild along the roadsides or neatly cultivated in orchards all over Vermont. The more I considered it the more I couldn't seem to understand why the pear- so closely related to the apple- seems to live in the pomological shadow of it's rounder, redder counterpart?

I've always been attracted to the underdog kind fruit crops that don't receive much attention from the public, or the forgotten heirloom varieties that our grandparents knew. At one point in time, as I read in the article by Jules Janick called The Pear in History, Literature, Popular Culture, and Art, the pear was just as prominent as the apple in Europe, Asia, and the New World, valued for its early spring blossoms, graceful tree form, long term storage qualities, and ability to make strong, sweet alcoholic beverages.  

Here's to the beginning of an attempt to pay tribute to a crop by trying to learn everything about putting it to use and managing it. The pear has, after all, appealed to the tongues, stomaches, livelihoods, and aesthetics of the human race for thousands of years.