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Gold and Chestnuts ? Another kuri kinton
Well there are homonyms… kuri kinton and kuri kinton Do you remember the wagashi I called kuri ? Today this is the Osechi Ryori (good-luck cuisine) type of kuri kinton. It’s a soft-textured dessert. The recipe used for New Year is different. As the season is over, they paste chestnuts that are preserved in syrup and colored with a dry kuchinashi (gardenia) bud (or fruit ?). Sweet potato can be added, or not. Take fresh kuri (Japanese chestnut), boil them a while… that was about 30 minutes. Cut in half and get the flesh with a spoon. Sweet potatoes… Idem, boiled and peeled. The kuchinashi (gardenia) flower… I had not. That’s expensive to use only one time. And as absurd as that seems, using saffron (the pricest spice on earth) was cheaper for me, since I have a big stash of saffron that I got from a wholesale store. I added a little honey for sweetening. I mixed in a mortar, pasting the potato finely, but letting chunks of chestnut.
(1 serving )
Filed under: Avec la recette, Home-made Fait-Maison, Japan/ cuisine japonaise, slow food, Snacks-Petits Gouters, tea, vegan, vegetarian, With recipe Tagged: chestnut, dessert, desserts, honey, Japanese chestnut, Japanese cuisine, Japanese ingredients, Japanese sweets, kuchinashi, kuri kinton, New Year, Osechi, Osechi Ryori, Osechi Ryouri, saffron, satsuma imo, side dishes, sweet potato, wagashi related searches : Gold
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