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Passionfruit Margarita Recipe for National Margarita Day

Each year on National Margarita Day, February 22nd, we publish a Margarita recipe. We’ve covered classic recipes and numerous fruits and other flavors: cherry, cranberry, ginger, guava, grape, grapefruit, kiwi, orange, peach, pineapple, pomegranate, strawberry, watermelon, and even a veggie Margarita with spring peas and tarragon. We now have more than 30 Margarita recipes.

Today, a new fruit enters the fold: passionfruit, in a Margarita recipe by Chef Tom Fraker of Melissa’s Produce (photo #1).

The recipe is below. But first, the history of the Margarita and a bit about passionfruit.

(You can spell it passionfruit or passion fruit. Both are correct. Its name is different in other languages*, including liliko’i in Hawaiian.)
 
 
WHAT IS PASSIONFRUIT?

The purple passionflower climbing vine (Passiflora edulis f. edulis), a plant with spectacular flowers (photos #3 and #4), is native to subtropical South America.

The origin of the purple passionfruit stretches from southern Brazil to northern Argentina. The much larger (and less flavorsome) yellow passionfruit (Passiflora edulus f. flavicarpa) may have also originated in Amazonian Brazil, but it is not known for certain.

Neither variety was well documented before the arrival of Europeans, but it was part of the local diet. European missionaries used it as an educational aid while trying to convert the indigenous peoples to Christianity.

The design of the flower was used to illustrate the five wounds in the crucifixion of Christ. It got its English name around 1700, when it was called the passionflower after the Passion of Jesus.

The fruit of the passionflower is, in turn, the passionfruit (photo #2).

Passionfruit is actually a large berry. It’s round, about three inches long, with a thick, waxy rind that becomes wrinkly as the fruit ripens (photo #3). The gelatinous pulp inside is composed of sacs filled with orange-colored juice and seeds. The seeds are small, black, and crunchy seeds.

The hard outer rind contains the pulp, sacs of orange-colored juice, and black seeds. The pulp can be easily scooped out with a spoon.

Or, scoop the pulp into a bowl. If it’s too tart, sprinkle it with a bit of sweetener. Some people add cream.

The more wrinkled the skin, the riper the fruit (photo #3). Green passionfruit isn’t ripe.

In addition to eating the pulp, it can be:

  • Strained into juice.
  • Strained into nectar†.
  • Strained into coulis, a purée used as a dessert sauce.
  • Made into curd, jam, or preserves.
  •  
    The juice, curd, and jam in turn can be made into ice cream, sorbet, puddings, pies, tart filling, smoothies, soft drinks, syrup, etc.
     
     
    RECIPE: PASSIONFRUIT MARGARITA
     
    Ingredients For 2 Drinks (photo #1)

  • 3/4 cups tequila
  • 1/2 cup lime juice
  • 1/4 cup blue agave syrup
  • 1/2 cup triple sec
  • 3/4 cup passionfruit pulp (from about 10 ripe passionfruits)
  • Lime wedge
  • Kosher salt or other rim
  •  
    Preparation

    1. FILL half of a cocktail shaker with ice. Add the rest of the ingredients, except for the salt. Place the cap on the shaker and shake vigorously for 30 seconds.

    2. RUB a lime wedge around the rim of 2 Margarita glasses (substitute rocks glasses). Pour the salt onto a plate and dip and twist the glasses into the salt to coat the rim.

    3. POUR the drinks into the glasses.

     


    [1] Passionfruit Margarita (photo © Melissa’s Produce).


    [2] A passionfruit is smooth-skinned until it’s ripe. Then, it wrinkles (photo © Zuzu Sparkling Cocktails).


    [3] When wrinkled, passionfruit is ripe and ready to eat (photo © Good Eggs).


    [4] Passiflora edulis, the passionflower (photo public domain | Wikipedia).


    [5] Another subspecies of passionflower (photo © Karen Park Jennings Photography | Spring Hill Nursery.

     

    ________________

    *Spanish missionaries called the flower of the Passiflora edulis the flor de las cinco lagas (flower of the five wounds) because it illustrated the crucifixion of Christ.

    †The juice is made from simply squeezing the juice sacs. Passionfruit nectar is made from the entire passion fruit, rind and all; not just the pulp. The fruit is cut up and simmered in water until soft. It’s then strained (if desired) and sweetened. Here’s a recipe.
     
     

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    Wild Tonic Jun Kombucha & World Kombucha Day


    [1] A refreshing glass of Blue Basil Wild Tonic (all photos © Wild Tonic).


    [2] In addition to 16-ounce bottles, there are 12-ounce cans.


    [3] Hard Blueberry Mint.


    [4] Four varieties of hard jun kombucha have 5.6% A.B.V. (alcohol by volume).


    [5] The refreshing flavors are like spritzes.


    [6] Substitute tonic water for Wild Tonic in a Moscow Mule.


    [7] Toast to someone’s health (or to the New Year) with flutes of Wild Tonis.


    [8] Upcycle your bottles into vases or individual water bottles instead of glasses at the table.

     

    In 2020, Kombucha Brewers International (KBI), the leading trade organization of commercial kombucha brewers worldwide, declared February 21st as the first World Kombucha Day. It follows on the heels of National Booch Day, which a single brand, KeVita, founded on January 15th, using the shortened, hip version of the product’s name.

    Both holidays celebrate love for the ancient brew of fermented tea that is kombucha (kom-BOO-cha), named for the fungus-like substance, a symbiotic colony of yeast and lactobacillus bacteria*, that is used to ferment brewed, sweetened black tea into the fizzy drink that people have used for centuries as a healthful, detoxifying tonic and a mild digestif.

    And a green tea version of kombucha, Wild Tonic Jum Kombucha, is our Top Pick Of The Week. But first…
     
     
    THE HISTORY OF KOMBUCHA

    The reason for selecting January 21st as World Kombucha Day dates to the Chinese Qin (Tsin) dynasty (221-206 B.C.E.), where we find the first recorded mention of kombucha.

    During this period, a fermented tea known as Tea of Immortality was brewed by the royal alchemists for the emperor Qin Shi Huang**, who sought to lengthen his life by any means available. (Alas, the emperor died at age 49).

    One story says that kombucha first fermented accidentally in the canteens of soldiers, who noted its restorative powers on the battlefield.

    The name itself comes from a Korean physician, Kom-bu, who introduced it to the Japanese Emperor Ingyo in the year 414 C.E. as a healing drink. It became known as tea of Kom-bu, or Kom-bu-cha.

    Jun, the style of Wild Tonic, our Top Pick Of The Week, it is claimed by Western vendors to have been developed thousands of years ago by monks of Tibet and northern China. It is more likely a modern invention (see why in the footnote).

    Kombucha was introduced to the West via Russia, where it arrived before the Industrial Revolution and became very popular. Our grandmother brewed it, as likely did her grandmother, who lived during the Industrial Revolution† and much later, in the 1990s, piqued the interest of the American future co-founder of Kombucha Wonder Drink, which markets it as a prebiotic sparkling fermented tea (we reviewed it in 2006).

    Consumers in the trendy Pacific Northwest latched on to it as a refreshing, good-for-you drink. Brands proliferated. There is now even hard kombucha, made through a secondary fermentation that raises the alcohol content naturally, with percentages similar to craft beers and hard ciders (in the case of Wild Tonic, 5.6% A.B.V. to 7.6% A.B.V.).

    So why February 21st for World Kombucha Day? The date relates to the unification of China in 211 B.C.E. Because 2/21 has a relation to 221 B.C.E. O.K., if you need to pick a particular date, it’s as good as any.
     
     
    DOES KOMBUCHA REALLY CONTRIBUTE TO HEALTH?

    Since those ancient times, devotees have ascribed to kombucha powers the longevity Qin sought, as well as the ability to cure baldness and high blood pressure and a cancer preventative, among other purported health benefits.

    So is there any truth to the powers of kombucha?

    From a modern scientific standpoint, detoxifying benefits are believed to come from the glucuronic acid that is created during fermentation, not from the yeasts and bacteria in the culture.

    According to the Mayo Clinic, imited evidence suggests kombucha tea may offer benefits similar to probiotic supplements, including promoting a healthy immune system and preventing constipation.

    There have been no clinical trials or support published in any scientific journal.
     
     
    TOP PICK OF THE WEEK: WILD TONIC JUN KOMBUCHA

    In China, a drink called jun, or xun, is a slightly different form of kombucha. It is made from green tea instead of black tea, and with honey instead of cane sugar. And a plus for some: It lacks the vinegar “bite” common in traditional kombucha.

    Wild Tonic’s versions are delightfully refreshing and smooth: elegantly effervescent with light, dancing flavors as enjoyable as a mocktail or a wine spritz without the wine.

    You can use it as a mixer for cocktails, or move right ahead to their hard jun kombucha, with a 5.6% A.B.V. (11.2 proof, slightly more alcohol than a glass of Moscato d’Asti wine).

    The line is certified USDA Organic, and is made from organic green teas, fruits, herbs, spices, and flowers.

    The drinks contain prebiotics, probiotics, amino acids, and antioxidants, are all-natural and sulfite free.

    The traditional jun kombucha (non-alcoholic) flavors:

  • Blackberry Mint
  • Blueberry Basil
  • Chai Pear
  • Goji Rose
  • Mango Ginger
  •  
    The hard jun kombucha flavors (5.6% A.B.V.) include:

  • Blueberry Basil
  • Goji Rose
  • Mango Ginger
  • Strawberry Blood Orange
  •  
    The company takes every step to source sustainably and ethically, and to reduce its carbon footprint. The blue glass bottles, embossed with honeybees, can be upcycled for other beverages, water, and flower vases.

    Even after the tea is brewed, the spent leaves are sent back to the farm to be used as compost.
     
     
    GET YOUR WILD TONIC JUN KOMBUCHA

    The line is available via Amazon/Whole Foods, Drizly, Favor, Instacart, Postmates, Uber Eats, and natural foods retailers (here’s the store locator).

    The website will begin to sell directly soon.

    For more information, head to WildTonic.com.

    ________________

    *This is called a SCOBY: Symbiotic Colony of Bacteria and Yeast.

    **Emperor Qin Shihuan unified China in 221 B.C.E. by conquering the last remaining warring states, and sought to build political stability, military strength, and economic unity. It was he who created the first Wanli Changcheng (Great Wall) on a subcontinental scale. Previously there were a number of changcheng (long walls), but Quin began the Great Wall Of China. He turned to necromancers (magicians, wizards) in search of elixirs, and was taken in by the fallacy that such medicines could be found [source].

    †The Industrial Revolution was the process of changing from an agrarian and handicraft economy to one dominated by industry and machine manufacturing. This process began in Britain in the 18th century, around 1760, and spread to other parts of the world to 1840 (and later in some areas, such as China and India).

    ††Some websites claim that jun comes from Tibet, where it has been made for 1,000 years. However, books on Tibetan food, and even a specialized book on Himalayan ferments, contain no mention of it. Second, tea was historically difficult to acquire in Tibet as it was not cultivated in the region. Third, green tea has never been popular in Tibet and fourth, the word “jun” does not exist in the Tibetan language. We haven’t yet found who marketed the first jun, but we’re still looking [source].

     

     
     

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    Pairing Wine With Dessert: Cake, Chocolate & More For National Drink Wine Day

    It’s National Drink Wine Day. But let’s expand our American horizons to a different slant: pairing wine with sweet foods.

    > The history of wine is below.

    Also check out:

  • Pairing Wine & Cake
  • Pairing Wine & Chocolate
  • Pairing Wine & Desserts
  • Pairing Wine With Ice Cream & Sorbet
  •  
    A bonus:

    Pairing Beer & Chocolate
     
     
    NOW IT’S TIME TO PARTY!

    What should you do with these wine-and-sweet-food pairings? Have a party, of course!

    Pick your theme, then invite friends to a dessert potluck.
     
     
    > The History Of Cake

    > The History Of Chocolate

    > The History Of Ice Cream
     
     
    A BRIEF HISTORY OF WINE

    The oldest evidence of fruits and grains fermented into alcoholic drinks is found in China, around 9,000 years ago. Here’s a timeline.

  • 7000-6600 B.C.E. in China. People in the Yellow River Valley (Henan province) made a fermented wine of rice, fruit, and honey. It was stored in earthenware jars.
  • 4,000 B.C.E. in the Middle East. Wine making facilities are discovered in excavations in Armenia, Georgia, Iran and Israel. The wine was stored in large earthenware vessels submerged in the ground.
  • 1600–1100 B.C.E. in the Middle East. Evidence of wine transported in clay amphorae and goatskins, in Assyria, Egypt, and Mesopotamia.
  • 1400 B.C.E. in the Middle East. Amphorae become the primary container to ship wine in ancient Israel and Greece.
  •  


    [1] Enjoy a late harvest Muscat with your cake(photo © PantherMedia Stock Agency | Vadim Vasenin).


    [2] Vin santo, a Tuscan dessert wine served with cantucci (shorter biscotti) have long been a popular dessert in Italy. (photo © PantherMedia Stock Agency | Valery Vvoennyy.

  • 1500–1200 B.C.E. Greece. Clay tablets written in Linear B, the ancient Greek transcript, include messages about vines and wine.
  • 900 B.C.E. Northern Europe. During the Iron Age in Gaul, barrels become the preferred container to store and ship wine.
  • 900–100 B.C.E., Greece & Rome. Clay amphorae remain the preferred container to store and transport wine.
  • 206 B.C.E.-220 C.E., China. Wine begins to be produced in China in the Han dynasty.
  • 77 C.E., Rome. Pliny the Elder writes “Vino Veritas” (“In wine, there is truth”) in his Naturalis Historia (Natural History).
  • 1000, France. Château de Goulaine is built in the Loire Valley. Home to the family of the marquis de Goulaine for more than 1,000 years, it still makes wine and is possibly the oldest extant winery.
  • 15th and 16th centuries, Germany. Wines that may have been sealed and stored in stoneware jugs re-ferment, creating wines with spritz. This creamy or “crémant” style led to the creation of French sparkling wine and British cider.
  • Late 1500s, Southern Europe. The wine was preserved for long shipping journeys through fortification: adding alcohol. Higher alcohol meant better preservation, and led to the creation of Madeira, Marsala, Port, and Sherry. (I.P.A. beer was created for the same reason: to be shipped long distances, in this case to India).
  • 1600s, Europe. Sweet wines are the most highly prized: Riesling from Germany, Sauternes from Bordeaux, and Tokaji from Hungary*.
  • 1600s, Portugal. Glass wine bottles were first popularized to age Port wines.
  • 1650, France. Somewhere in Bordeaux, Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon Blanc naturally cross to create Cabernet Sauvignon.
  • 1659, South Africa. Grapevines are first introduced to the area around Cape Town, leading to the creation of the great sweet wine Vin de Constance. It is said that Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette had more bottles of it in their cellars at the Palace of Versailles than French Burgundy. In the U.S., John Adams and George Washington were great fans of the wine. Napoleon Bonaparte spent his exile on St. Helena drowning his sorrows in Vin de Constance. Jane Austen wrote that “the finest old Constantia wine is the perfect remedy for a disappointed heart.” French poet Charles Baudelaire compared his lover’s kiss to both opium and the finest Constantia wine [source].
  • 1776, Philadelphia. Madeira was the wine enjoyed at the signing of the Constitution.
  • 1737, Hungary. Tokaj, in the foothills of the Zemplén Mountains, becomes the world’s first demarcated wine region. It was done to protect the sweet white wine making tradition of Tokaji Aszú, the world’s oldest sweet wine, which had then been made for nearly 1000 years.
  • 1740s-1820s, Europe. Wine bottles were redesigned to be laid on their side, creating the ability to age wines long term. Glass bottles began to be used in the 17th century, although they were squat, with large bases and short necks. They were stood up straight for storage; but stored this way, the corks dry out. By the 1820s wine bottles resembled the traditional ones we use today [source].
  • 1857, California. The first commercial winery, Buena Vista Winery, is established in Sonoma County. It is still in business.
  • Mid-1800s, France. Sparkling wines are popularized in the Champagne region, partially due to consistency in wine bottle manufacturing that can withstand the pressure of the bubbly.
  • 1860s, Italy. Europeans still love sweet wines: The red wines of Barolo, today the most tannic and masculine of wines, are sweet.
  • 1890, U.S. Zinfandel is the most planted grape in America.
  • 1860-1900, France. Some 70% of Europe’s vineyards are killed by Phylloxera astatrix, a microscopic, aphid-like insects. Vineyards were replanted with hybrid wines that crossed the Vitis vinifera with resistant species.
  • 1920–1933, U.S. Prohibition is enacted. It is illegal to make and sell wines, except for a fraction needed for medicinal and religious purposes.
  • 1950s, U.S. Personnel returning from the war in France lead to the import and popularization of French wines.
  • 1965, Australia. Bag-in-a-box wine is invented by Australian winemaker Thomas Angove.
  • 1978, U.S. Robert Parker launches The Wine Advocate, a consumer newsletter that uses a novel 100-point wine rating system.
  • 2000. France is the world’s largest producer of wine in the world. Italy is second.
  • 2010. Cabernet Sauvignon is the world’s most planted wine grape.
  • 2013. China becomes the world’s largest consumer of dry red wines in the world [source].
  • Present, China. Thanks to its immense territory and favorable climates, China is the largest grape producer worldwide, contributing to nearly half of the world’s grape production [source].
  •  
     
    ________________

    *Cleopatra had a penchant for Muscat Of Alexandria, a sweet white wine that is still made today. The grape originated in North Africa, and was cultivated extensively on the island of Lemnos in the North-Eastern Aegean region of Greece. Cleopatra’s wine purportedly came from there (around 40 B.C.E.).

     
     

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    Cabbage Recipes And Cabbage History For National Cabbage Day


    [1] The four varieties of cabbage found in the U.S.: Savoy…(photo © Monika Grabowska | Unsplash).

    Head Of Napa Cabbage
    [2] Napa cabbage…(photo © MG Produce).


    [3] Green cabbage…(photos #3 and #4 © Good Eggs).

    Head Of Red Cabbage
    [4] …and red cabbage.


    [5] Today’s recipe (below), Pasta, Cabbage, Salume & Pecorino Cheese (photos #5 and #6 © Veroni).


    [6] Salume Milano, a mild salami with garlic and pepper.


    [7] Stuffed Savoy cabbage—a beauty (photo © Waitrose).


    [8] A simple idea: Make your a salad with chicken strips atop cabbage instead of lettuce (photo by Elvira Kalviste | © The Nibble).

     

    We’re glad that cabbage has a holiday: National Cabbage Day on February 17th. Cabbage is a high-antioxidant Brassica—the family of cruciferous vegetable powerhouses, packed with potent, cancer-fighting phytonutrients. Family members include arugula, bok choy, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, collards, horseradish/wasabi, kale, kohlrabi, mizuna, mustard greens, radish, rapeseed/canola, rapini, rutabaga, tatsoi, turnips, and watercress, among others.

    But today, it’s all about cabbage.
     
     
    THE HISTORY OF CABBAGE

    About 2,500 years ago, Brassica oleracea grew as a wild plant along the coasts of Britain, France, and parts of the Mediterranean. It was known as wild mustard.

    Hop over to Ancient Greece and Rome, where wild mustard was cultivated in fields and home gardens. Farmers and home gardeners bred the mustard by selecting seeds from the plants that grew more leaves, yielding more food per plant.

    After many generations, this artificial selection (as opposed to natural selection, with no human intervention) produced a leafy version of wild mustard that looked more like modern-day kale or collard greens.

    Fast forward to sometime after the year 1600: Farmers selected seeds from plants that produced enlarged leaf buds. After many generations, huge heads of tightly rolled leaves emerged—what we call cabbage.

    Other farmers selected for enlarged flowering structures that became broccoli and cauliflower; enlarged stems that became kohlrabi, small heads that became Brussels sprouts).

    While these cultivars are diverse in appearance and taste, it may be because the plants grew in different geographic areas and terroirs, which offered more genetic diversity for breeding [source].

    Today in the U.S., there are four main cabbage varieties: green, red, Napa, and Savoy (photos #1, #2, #3, and #4).

    There’s also a new variety, not widely available, called sweetheart cabbage, kool cabbage, caraflex cabbage, or pointed cabbage.

    All can be eaten raw or cooked.

    > More Cabbage History
     
     
    FAVORITE CABBAGE DISHES

    We started eating lots of cabbage years back, when the medical data on antioxidants first appeared in the consumer press. Here are some of our favorite ways to enjoy cabbage; and there are hundreds of others.

  • Cabbage chips (purchased or made in the dehydrator)
  • Cabbage cups and wraps
  • Cabbage pancakes
  • Charred, grilled, sautéed and stir-fried cabbage sides
  • Colcannon
  • Coleslaw and other cabbage salads (with apples, Asian pear, red onion, and many other ingredients)
  • Corned beef and cabbage
  • Dumpling, egg roll and knish filling
  • Japanese and Korean dishes (kimchi is a favorite!)
  • Sauerkraut
  • Sausages with cabbage and bacon
  • Soup
  • Stuffed cabbage/cabbage rolls
  • Tacos, tostadas and other Tex-Mex
  •  
    But what about pasta?

    We’d never come across a cabbage and pasta recipe until we came across this one, sent to us by Veroni.

    Looking about, we then found others, but start here.
     
     
    RECIPE: PASTA WITH SAVOY CABBAGE SALAME & PECORINO CHEESE

    You can substitute different pasta shapes, cabbage varieties, and types of salame (Americans spell it salami). We used leftover baked ham in one variation, and pork and sausages would work equally as well.

    Ingredients For 4 Servings

  • 1 box rigatoni or substitute
  • 1.5 cups Savoy cabbage
  • 7-8 ounces of Salame Milano or substitute
  • 1 garlic clove
  • ½ glass red wine
  • Fresh sage
  • Pecorino cheese
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt and pepper
  •  
    Preparation

    1. Brown the garlic in hot oil. Then cut the salame into strips and add it to the pan to brown. After 1 minute, add the sage and red wine and simmer until the wine evaporates. Keep warm.

    2. WASH the Savoy cabbage, cut it into slices, and boil it together with the pasta. Drain, saving a bit of cooking water, and toss it in the pan with the sauce. Taste and if necessary, adjust the salt and pepper.

    3. STIR in the cooking water and plenty of grated pecorino cheese, toss and serve.
     
     
    MORE CABBAGE RECIPES

  • Asian/Chinese Chicken Salad
  • Barley Stuffed Cabbage With Guinness
  • Cabbage Chips
  • Chicken Larb With Grapes
  • Chinese Egg Rolls
  • Choucroute Garni
  • Corned Beef & Cabbage Casserole
  • Corned Beef & Cabbage Egg Rolls
  • Corned Beef & Cabbage Potato Salad
  • Corned Beef & Cabbage Sandwich
  • Corned Beef & Cabbage Tacos
  • Dobladas
  • Fish Tacos
  • Grilled Cabbage Steaks
  • Guinness-Marinated Corned Beef & Cabbage
  • Pulled Pork Sliders With Cabbage Slaw
  • Red Cabbage With Chorizon & Bacon
  • Slow Cooker Corned Beef & Cabbage
  • Unstuffed Cabbage & Pierogies
  •  
     
    MORE SLAW & COLE SLAW RECIPES

  • Asian Slaw With Snow Peas & Pear
  • Bacon & Blue Cheese Cole Slaw
  • BBQ Slaw With Mexican Accents
  • BLT Slaw
  • Cabbage Slaw With Lime-Cumin Vinaigrette
  • Citrus Slaw
  • Spicy Thai Cabbage Salad
  • Vanilla Slaw
  • Vietnamese Cabbage Slaw
  •  

     
     

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    A Delicious Almond Cake Recipe For National Almond Day


    [1] Orange and almonds are a great pairing in this Mediterranean-style cake, which uses extra virgin olive oil instead of butter (photos #1, #2 and #3 © Discover California Wines).


    [2] Check out different wine and cake pairings in this article.


    [3] To share this cake with guests, offer coffee and tea in addition to a dessert wine. And don’t forget: Some people might like a glass of milk!


    [5] The rosy flesh of blood oranges will make a more beautiful garnish (photo © Gelson’s Markets).


    [6] Instead of the rosiness of blood oranges, cara cara oranges have pink flesh (photo © Good Eggs).


    [7] Most California Muscats are sweet, although around the world, the wine produced may be dry, medium, sparkling, a sweet dessert wine. Quady Essencia is a full-bodied sweet wine made with Orange Muscat grapes (photo © Quady Winery).

     

    What to bake on February 16th, National Almond Day? How about this divine Toasted Almond, Orange, and Olive Oil Cake recipe, which uses heart-healthy EVOO instead of butter, and is scented with orange zest.

    This easy but impressive toasted almond cake captures three of California’s favorite flavors: navel oranges, olive oil, and almonds.

  • February is not only the height of California’s citrus season, it’s also when the state’s olive oil producers release their fresh, fruity extra virgin olive oil from last fall’s harvest.
  • As for almonds, they’re the official state nut*.
  •  
    For a bigger celebration, we’re adding a California Muscat (California Late Harvest wine is equally delish).

    > The history of almonds.

    > The history of cake.

    > Pairing wine and cake.

    > The different types of cake.
     
     
    RECIPE: TOASTED ALMOND, ORANGE & OLIVE OIL CAKE

    For the orange garnish, consider one of the showier varieties: rosy blood oranges, or pink-fleshed Cara Cara oranges. But even a standard navel orange will look good atop the cake.

    You can change the fruit garnish seasonally.

  • In the spring, swap the citrus for strawberries.
  • In summer, cherries, blackberries, and peaches.
  • In autumn, pears.
  •  
    This cake loves fruit of any kind, and a little whipped cream never hurts—or a dab of crème fraîche or mascarpone. You’ll want to keep it in your dessert repertoire year-round.

    Enjoy it with a California dessert wine.
     
    Ingredients For A 9-Inch (23-cm) Cake

  • 1/3 cup (50 g) raw almonds
  • 1 cup plus 3 tablespoons (140 g) sifted all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 cup (200 g) sugar
  • 1 cup (250 ml) whole-milk yogurt
  • ½ cup (125 ml) extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon (packed) grated orange zest
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
  • Garnish: 3 tablespoons (20 g) sliced almonds
  • Garnish: 2-3 oranges, sliced
  • Optional for serving: whipped cream
  •  
    Preparation

    1. COAT the bottom and sides of a 9-inch (23-cm) round cake pan with vegetable spray. Line the bottom with parchment paper. Dust the sides with flour, shaking out the excess.

    2. PREHEAT the oven to 350°F (175°C). Toast the raw almonds on a baking sheet until fragrant and lightly colored inside, 12 to 15 minutes. Cool completely.

    3. GRIND the toasted almonds in a food processor, along with 1 tablespoon of the sifted flour, until fine. Transfer to a bowl and whisk together the ground almonds, the remaining flour, the baking powder, and salt.

    4. WHISK the eggs in a large bowl until well blended. Add the sugar gradually and whisk vigorously until the sugar dissolves. Whisk in the yogurt, olive oil, orange zest, and extracts. When well blended, add the dry ingredients. Whisk just until blended; do not overmix (it makes the cake tough).

    5. POUR the batter into the prepared pan. Sprinkle the sliced almonds on top. Bake until the cake feels firm on top and just begins to pull away from the sides of the pan, 35 to 40 minutes.

    6. COOL the cake in the pan on a rack for 10 minutes, then invert onto another rack and remove the pan and parchment paper. Invert again onto the first rack to finish cooling. Garnish with orange slices.
     
     
    WINE PAIRINGS

    A glass of sweet wine, with or without a piece of fresh fruit, is often served as dessert in Europe.

    You can also serve it with cookies: Follow the Italian tradition of serving Vin Santo, a dessert wine from the Tuscany region of Italy, with biscotti and other cookies (shortbread works nicely).

    California produces a range of sweet wines that complement a nutty cake.

  • Late-harvest white wines often made with Sauvignon Blanc, Sémillon, or a blend of the two, have honeyed aromas and a luscious, silky texture.
  • Dessert wines from the Muscat grape are more floral and highly scented; Orange Muscat, with its aromas of orange blossom and peach, is an uncommon treat.
  • Bubbly: Look for a California sparkling wine in an extra dry or demi-sec style. Despite the names, both styles are actually a touch sweet and perfect with an unfrosted cake.
  •  
    You can even have the cake with ice cream. Here’s how to pair ice cream with dessert wine.

    > Pairing wine and chocolate.

    > Wine and dessert pairings.

    > Pairing wine and cake (second article).

    > Pairing wine and popcorn.
     
     
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    *To be perfectly accurate, California has designated four official state nuts: almonds, walnuts, pistachios, and pecans.

     

     
     

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