Baked Pears with Ice Cream
Submitted by happyzhangbo
Baked pears with vanilla ice cream: firm pears poached in apple juice, lemon, and brown sugar syrup until tender, chilled overnight, and served cored-side up with a scoop of ice cream.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
40 minREADY
50 minThis dessert is all about patience paying off. Pears halved and cored get baked in a simple syrup of apple juice, lemon, and brown sugar, then chilled overnight in their cooking liquid. That long cold soak is what transforms firm supermarket pears into something silky, aromatic, and jewel-toned.
The stove-to-oven trick is worth noting. Starting the poaching liquid on the stovetop before covering and baking lets the sugar fully dissolve and jump-starts the cooking. Without that initial boil, the cold syrup takes too long to reach poaching temperature and the pears cook unevenly.
Basting after 15 minutes is the move that gives the pears a glossy finish. The syrup coats the exposed top surface and infuses flavor into every layer of flesh.
Serve cored-side up so the little bowl cradles a scoop of vanilla ice cream, and pour a tablespoon of the reduced syrup around the edges. The warm-cold contrast with the ice cream is the whole point.
Kitchen Tips
- Use firm but ripe pears like Bosc, Anjou, or Bartlett. Overripe pears turn to mush in the oven.
- Leave the stems on two halves for presentation; they make the pears look elegant on the plate.
- Use a melon baller for neat, round cores. A spoon tears the flesh unevenly.
- Chill a full 8 hours minimum for the best flavor; 24 hours is better.
Variations
- Swap apple juice for white wine, pear nectar, or a splash of Poire Williams.
- Add a cinnamon stick, vanilla bean, or star anise to the syrup for spiced pears.
- Swap vanilla ice cream for mascarpone, crème fraîche, or whipped cream.
Ingredients
Directions
Preheat the oven to 375°F.
Peel the pears with a vegetable peeler.
Cut them in half lengthwise, leaving the stems on two of the halves if possible, and remove cores with a small melon baller.
Place in an 8×8-inch baking pan, cut-side down.
Combine the lemon juice, apple juice, water, and brown sugar; pour over the pears.
Set the pan over medium heat and bring the juices to a boil.
Cover the pan with aluminum foil.
Bake for 40 minutes (basting after 15 minutes), or until the pears are tender when tested with a toothpick.
Chill the pears overnight in the refrigerator, covered with the cooking syrup.
Serve in four small dessert bowls to fit, cored-side up, with a small scoop of ice cream in the center of each.
Spoon a little of the syrup into each bowl.
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