Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Kumquats: Sweet-tarts of the citrus rodeo


Kumquats do present a challenge for the uninitiated. In most citrus, the juicy pulp is consumed and the peel discarded. Kumquats, however, are eaten whole, and their appeal stems from the contrast between their tart flesh and thick, sweet rind.

But maybe folks are finally catching on. Without much fanfare, more and more kumquats are being grown in California, which now leads the nation in production. Granted, it's still a minor crop compared to other citrus, but chefs and home cooks alike are giving kumquats more respect, and specialty growers are planting intriguing, previously rare varieties.

Kumquats are intense, complex flavor bombs. Trained sensory analysts detect a fresh, citrusy odor and pungent taste to begin, followed by green and woody notes, with a persistent oily undertone and a sweet, apricot-like aftertaste. A few years ago, a Korean flavor chemist determined that the component that imparts the fruit's distinctive spicy aroma is an ester, present in minute quantities, called citronellyl acetate.
Northern San Diego County, where many farms focus on specialty crops, is the nation's top production area, with 71 acres of kumquats, mostly in small plantings. The local season starts in January and runs through June, but kumquats are at their best, fully ripe yet still firm, from now through April.

The fruit's biggest booster may be Helene Beck of Fallbrook, a.k.a. "Miss Kumquat," who grows several hundred of the trees with her husband, Robert. She sells kumquats wholesale and online, along with kumquat syrup, purée, conserves and fruit leather, and is working on a book of recipes.

"Even here in Fallbrook, many people still don't know what to do with them," she says, offering a plate of freshly baked kumquat cookies.

The view from her Tuscan-style hilltop villa, flanked by cypress trees, evokes an old-world vineyard and chateau.


Below in the kumquat orchard, the lush green trees sparkle with bright orange fruit, which two workers painstakingly clip into canvas sacks.

Chefs prize kumquats' pungency, chewy texture and sheer beauty. Breanne Varela, pastry chef at Lucques and AOC, is planning a dessert of yogurt panna cotta served with candied kumquats, Cocktail grapefruit and blood oranges. Zoe Nathan at Rustic Canyon combines kumquats with crème fraîche for an ice cream that she serves by itself or with cornmeal pound cake.

Origin in Asia

Kumquats are native to China, where they are eaten fresh, made into preserves, used for religious offerings and grown as ornamental plants. They are popularly considered citrus -- and were even first classified as members of the Citrus genus after the Scottish botanist Robert Fortune brought the first kumquat plant to Europe in 1846. But in 1915, the great scientist Walter T. Swingle established a new genus, Fortunella, for kumquats, based on structural differences in their flowers, leaves and fruits, compared with those of other Citrus.

Molecular sequence analyses, which in theory could determine how close kumquats are to Citrus genetically, have differed in their conclusions, depending on the methods used. A British botanist, David J. Mabberley, proposed reuniting kumquats taxonomically with Citrus in 1998, but Swingle's system is still more generally accepted among scientists, at least partly because they don't want the inconvenience and confusion of changing names.



Kumquats arrived in California about 1880, long after other citrus, and for many years, Florida dominated production, primarily in the gift-package trade; in California, kumquats were grown almost exclusively as ornamental plants. The 1950 census listed 180 acres of kumquats in Florida, just one in California. But starting in the late 1960s, increased Asian immigration to California spurred demand and prices for kumquats.

"The market was so hot for [kumquats] in the '80s, we used to send crews to harvest home garden trees," recalls Lloyd Bittner, manager of the Cal Flavor packing house in Escondido, which was at the center of the boom.

Eventually, supply exceeded demand, Bittner says. "People would call up to ask, 'Hey, are you coming to pick my kumquats this year?' But we had all that we could sell."

Today, California has 133 acres of kumquats, and Florida has 46, mostly near Dade City, northeast of Tampa. Shippers estimate that 80% of the crop goes to Asian Americans, and that 90% is the standard oval Nagami variety, with bright orange, spicy-sweet skin and tart pulp.

In the last decade, however, the roundish Meiwa variety, the best for eating fresh, has become more available. Introduced from Japan about 1910, after the Nagami variety, it is larger, with a thicker, sweeter skin, and the juice is less sour; when fully ripe it can have a wonderful tropical banana flavor.

Long popular in home gardens, it had not been planted much commercially because of its slower, less vigorous growth, incompatibility with some common rootstocks and the shorter shelf life of its fruit.


These drawbacks sound daunting, but in De Luz, a gorgeous, pristine area of citrus and avocado groves and chaparral north of Fallbrook, two growers, Juan Garcia and George Cunningham, have thrived planting Meiwas. "I sell 10-pound boxes of Nagami for $22, but Meiwa for $31," Cunningham says. "Meiwas just fly out of here."

Normally, other farmers would jump at such a lucrative opportunity, but citrus growers in San Diego County have suffered such catastrophic ordeals recently -- fires, irrigation water cutbacks and the threat of deadly greening disease -- that few are planting new citrus these days.

In the southeastern San Joaquin Valley, the state's largest commercial citrus district, kumquats are rare, but several niche growers offer exotic kumquats and hybrids.

The most potentially significant, although planted in only small quantities so far, is the Nordmann Seedless. It was discovered by George Otto Nordmann on a Nagami seedling in DeLand, Fla., in 1965. With a teardrop shape and a slightly thinner, paler skin (probably caused by the absence of plant hormones from the seeds), it looks a little different from the Nagami but has much the same flavor. Its primary appeal is its lack of seeds.

That's right, a seedless kumquat. For anyone who has ever grappled with a large batch of the fruit, that is major news. Tiny as they are, kumquats typically have two to five seeds, and removing them is tedious. D.J. Olsen, chef of wine bar Lou in Hollywood, which serves sliced candied Meiwas from Garcia with burrata, speck and vincotto, says his kitchen help groans when he brings in a box of kumquats for de-seeding. "They say, 'I did it last time, so it's your turn,' " he says. After tasting a Nordmann recently at the Santa Monica Farmers Market, Olsen said: "I'd buy that in a heartbeat."

Other seedless varieties exist in Texas and Asia, and it seems likely that in time, they will become common.

Kumquats ripen peculiarly late in the San Joaquin Valley -- as late as March in some locations. To supply the market for Chinese New Year, which can fall from late January to mid-February, several growers have planted Fukushu, which is large, round and juicy, and matures around Christmas. It is sold as a kumquat but is actually a hybrid with mandarin.

"Asians love them, and marmalade companies get into bidding wars for them," says Mike Foskett of California Citrus Specialties, who has 300 Fukushu trees.

The calamondin

Another kumquat-mandarin hybrid starting to be grown commercially is the calamondin, the national citrus fruit of the Philippines, where the juice is used for souring, like limes or lemons.

Filipino immigrants to California have long grown the attractive trees in their gardens and sold some of the fruit at farmers markets, but not in substantial quantities.

Brigitte and Angelito Uson, taking the cake for creative siting, planted 175 calamondin (or kalamansi) trees to beautify a bare corner of the lot around their funeral home, Vaca Hills Chapel, in Vacaville, Calif., southwest of Sacramento.

They did so well selling the fruit to Filipino stores in the San Francisco area that they planted nearly 4,000 trees on 10 acres in nearby Fairfield. Filipinos squeeze fresh calamondin juice into marinades for barbecue meats and add it to soy sauce to dress noodles, while the rind, which has a kumquat aroma, is used to flavor custards, Angelito Uson says.

Kumquats and their kin may remain too perplexing to make it into the big leagues of produce, but their idiosyncrasy at least has earned them a niche more dignified than puerile projectiles.

http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-kumquat25-2009feb25,0,541741,full.story

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

The Way We Eat: Skin Deep

By Amanda Hesser
Published: February 26, 2006,
©The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/26/magazine/26food.html
Mitchell Feinberg
I am about to encourage you to buy and cook a fruit that is probably not available in your grocery store. But before you dismissively turn the page, consider this: If it weren't for stories about once-hard-to-find ingredients like extra-virgin olive oil, prosciutto and fresh thyme, we would still be trying to make something edible out of canned peas.

Forum: Cooking and Recipes

Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

Now that that's settled, let's talk about kumquats. The size and shape of a large olive, the kumquat is like an orange in reverse, with a sweet skin and tart pulp. So you don't have to peel the kumquat; you simply eat the entire fruit. Thus its brilliance.

Need to add some zest to a salad? No more straining your knife skills by segmenting an orange. Just slice a kumquat into thin rounds and toss them in. Need to add acidity to a braise of pork, duck or lamb? Drop kumquats in whole during the last 30 minutes of cooking. Need an easy dessert? Simmer them in sugar syrup until tender, and watch as they become translucent and deflate like tiny tires as they cool; serve the softened kumquats with cheese. Slice them in half horizontally, dip their ends in egg white followed by a mixture of raw sugar and cinnamon and freeze them. They turn into sweet-tart ice cubes. Or just pile them in a bowl and pass them around after dinner.

Kumquats, which are not citrus fruits but belong to another genus, originated in China and have been cultivated across Asia for centuries. They inspired some unorthodox grafting techniques: in "The Oxford Companion to Food," Alan Davidson cites this bit of instruction from the "Book of Nabatean Agriculture," a 10th-century Iraqi text: "The branch which is to be grafted must be in the hand of a beautiful damsel, whilst a male person has disgraceful and unnatural sexual intercourse with her; during intercourse the woman grafts the branch into the tree."

Modern growers have streamlined the cultivation process somewhat. Although kumquats have been in America for more than 150 years, Helene Beck of Beck Groves in Fallbrook, Calif., says that when she decided to plant them, about 25 years ago, "the nursery was happy to have someone who would buy their kumquat trees." And the owners of the nearby orange and lemon groves were pleased to see one less competitor.

Now the Becks harvest more than 300,000 pounds of kumquats a year and offer tastings at their local farmer's market and in specialty-grocery stores. Many people squirm and pucker when they put a kumquat in their mouths — for those expecting a miniature orange, the first taste is a bit of a shock. But then, Beck says, "there are those who know about it, and they will just gobble them down and feel heroic."

It is difficult not to love: the kumquat is like a tidy orange. You get the punch of zest and sweetness without a lot of drippy juice. And this is why it is terrific for cooking. Most kumquats you see in America are nagami kumquats, the oval variety, but there is talk of the meiwa, a rounder, sweeter variety, making a run at the nagami. California kumquats are grown from January through June and are at their best during March and April. Kumquats from Florida, where the growing season begins in November, are harvested until mid-March. (They are grown in other states as well.)

Organic and biodynamic kumquats from Beck Groves are $4 a pound, plus shipping, and come in 10-, 20- or 25-pound boxes; www.lavignefruits.com. There is no need to buy more than five pounds of kumquats, and many farms, like Beck Groves, also grow varieties of citrus, so if you order a large box, you can get a mix of fruits, which, if stored in a cool place, will last for weeks. By then you might even be used to them.


Salad of Kumquats, Dates and Shaved Parmesan 
5 kumquats
4 handfuls baby arugula
½ cup flat-leaf parsley leaves
2 Medjool dates, pitted and diced
¼ cup Parmesan shavings (made +++with a vegetable peeler)
2 teaspoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste.
Slice the kumquats into thin rounds, discarding the seeds. Combine the arugula, parsley, dates, kumquats and Parmesan in a large bowl. Whisk together the lemon juice and olive oil; season with salt and pepper. Pour over the salad and toss. Serves 4.


Shrimp With Pineapple and Pickled Kumquats(This recipe is worth the two-day wait for pickling.)
1 cup white-wine vinegar
2 cardamom pods
12 kumquats
1 ½ tablespoons honey
Freshly ground black pepper
Pinch of piment d'Espelette, Aleppo pepper or toasted and ground red-pepper flakes
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for sautéing
1/3 pineapple, peeled, cored and cut into 2-inch cubes
1 cup frisée or other bitter or spicy greens, torn into small pieces
16 large shrimp, peeled and deveined
Kosher salt
10 sprigs thyme.

1. To pickle the kumquats, bring the vinegar to a boil in a small pan. Add the cardamom pods. Put the kumquats in a heatproof container, then pour in the vinegar mixture. Let cool, then refrigerate for 2 days.
2. In a small bowl, whisk together the honey and 3 tablespoons of the kumquat vinegar. Season with black pepper and piment d'Espelette. Whisk in the olive oil.
3. Thinly slice 6 pickled kumquats and remove the seeds; set aside. Thinly slice the pineapple cubes. (You need only 12 slices total.) In a mixing bowl, combine the frisée, pineapple and pickled kumquats.
4. Place the shrimp in a bowl and season generously with salt; add the thyme and toss. Heat a large cast-iron pan until almost smoking, then pour in enough oil to thinly coat the base. Carefully add the shrimp and thyme and brown on both sides until just cooked through, about 2 minutes; discard the thyme. Transfer to the bowl with the frisée. Pour in just enough vinaigrette to coat (about half) and toss. Divide among 4 plates. Serves 4. Adapted from John Fraser at Compass.



Braised Duck With Green Olives and Kumquats 

1 5-pound duck, quartered
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
Extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium onion, sliced ¼ inch thick
4 large cloves garlic, peeled and smashed
1 cup white wine
2 fresh bay leaves
3 to 4 cups chicken broth
12 kumquats
8 green Cerignola olives.

1. Season the duck with salt and pepper. Lightly coat the base of a large braising pan with olive oil. Lay the duck skin side down in the pan, place over medium-low heat and cook for 30 minutes. Strain off the fat and continue to cook over medium heat until the skin is dark and crisp, another 30 minutes. Transfer the duck to a plate.
2. Drain all but 1 tablespoon of fat from the pan; add the onion and garlic. Sauté until the onion wilts. Add the wine and reduce over high heat until syrupy; add the bay leaves. Return the duck to the pan, skin side up, then pour in enough broth to cover it by two-thirds. Tuck the kumquats and olives into the broth, cover and simmer until tender, 30 to 40 minutes.
3. Let the duck cool in the broth, then remove the duck, kumquats, olives, onions and bay leaves and set aside. Skim the fat from the broth, then reheat the broth, reducing by half. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Return the duck and its accompaniments to the pan to warm through. Place a piece of duck on a plate, topped with olives, kumquats, onions and sauce. Serves 4.



Kumquat Ice Drops
1/4 cup raw sugar
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 egg white
1 teaspoon honey
10 kumquats, halved, seeds removed.
1. In a small bowl, combine the sugar, salt and cinnamon. In another small bowl, lightly beat the egg white and honey.
2. Line a plate with wax paper. Dip the kumquat halves halfway into the egg-white mixture, then immediately dip into the sugar mixture. Lay on the plate and freeze until solid. Serves 4. Adapted from Kim Severson.



Candied Kumquats
1 cup sugar
1/2 pound kumquats
1. In a medium saucepan, bring the sugar and 2 cups water to a boil, stirring until dissolved.
2. Add the kumquats, cover the fruit with a piece of parchment paper and a small plate or lid to keep them submerged.
3. Simmer over low heat until the kumquats are translucent, about 25 minutes.
4. Drain the fruit and reserve the syrup. Serve with cheese or ice cream. The syrup may also be reduced and drizzled on toast spread with butter. Makes 1/2 pound. Adapted from "Sunday Suppers at Lucques," by Suzanne Goin.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The blood oranges have been picked! Phew! We were mighty busy over the last week. 40,000 pounds of organic blood oranges were taken by semi to our juice processor. Before the juice is even produced, half of it is already sold.

Hundreds of blood oranges in the dappled sun under a tree.

Gone to be Juiced

Twenty tons of organic blood oranges have gone to our processing plant to be juiced. We package only freshly squeezed 100% juice, nothing is ever added, and we never use concentrates, just fresh oranges from our grove. Here are some images of the picking process that you might enjoy.

Yummy, sweet juicy blood oranges

A proud grove employee

Bins and bins of oranges

To pick, we use ladders and also actually climb up
into the tree to reach all the fruit.

The finished product!

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Time to Make the Doughnuts, or in Our Case, Pick the Oranges



We're excited! Blood Oranges are in full season. We had a lot of rain in Southern California this year, which we are mightily grateful for, but because of it, the crop is a little later. The trucks arrive tomorrow with all the bins, and we will load up 40,000 pounds, (no, I didn't make a mistake with zeroes), that's 20 TONS of organic, biodynamically grown fruit to be squeezed into our famous Blood Orange Juice. We'll be out picking, packing, and loading for about a week.

It's a busy time at Beck Grove, but also a very rewarding time, because we can literally see the "fruits" of our labor. I'll post some pictures of the whole process so you can see what a typical harvest looks like, so stay tuned.

The juice is fabulous served on its own, but it's also a great base or addition to other beverages. In an earlier post I offered a recipe for a Banana Blood Orange Smoothie.

Here's another recipe for Blood Orange Mimosas. I promise they'll be a big hit at your next brunch.
 
                Blood Orange Mimosas

Rim the champagne flute with sugar. To do this just moisten the top of the glass by dipping it in a saucer filled with water. Set up another saucer with sugar. We used natural raw sugar, but you can use white sugar or color it if you like.

Fill the flute one third full of chilled LaVigne Blood Orange Juice and top it with chilled champagne. Garnish with a blood orange slice or a sprig of mint or fresh thyme. Cheers!

All photos by Carl Kravats

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

And You Thought You Loved Carrot Cake

You thought you loved carrot cake, but just wait until you try this Victorian Orange Kumquat Cake! The melding of flavors of oranges, kumquats, walnuts (or pecans), raisins, and rum come together to create the most delightful, moist, and flavorful cake you've ever experienced. When the cake is done, you pour and a sauce made of orange juice, sugar, and rum over the cake and let the flavors bloom for a day or two, and you won't believe the result.Dust with powdered sugar before serving with coffee or good strong English tea.

 

 Victorian Orange Kumquat Cake

This recipe is from Emerill Lagasse
. You can visit his site at http://www.emerils.com.

Serves 8-10


Ingredients: 
 
• Peel from 3 large oranges
• 1 jar (10 oz.) La Vigne Kumquat Conserve
• 1-cup raisins
• 1-cup sugar
• 1/2-cup butter
• 2 eggs
• 3/4-cup buttermilk
• 2 cups flour
• 1 tsp. baking soda
• 1/2 tsp. salt
• 1/2 cup chopped nuts
• 1-cup fresh orange juice
• 1/2-cup sugar
• 1 TBSP dark rum

Preparation:

Cake:
Grind together, orange peel, raisins and 3/4 jar Kumquat Conserve. Cream sugar and butter. Add eggs and buttermilk. Sift flour and dry ingredients. Fold flour, dry ingredients and ground fruit into creamed butter and sugar. Pour into well-greased 9" spring form pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 45 minutes or until done. Let cake rest in pan for 10 minutes then remove cake from pan.

Orange Syrup:
Combine last three ingredients and heat together until dissolved. Re-insert cake into pan and ladle syrup over cake (one TBSP at a time).
Store cake at room temperature and garnish with remaining 1/4 jar Kumquat Conserve. Cake mellows and is best after a couple of days. Cake can be stored at room temperature for several days.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Smoothies

 Photo by Carl Kravats

Here in Southern California smoothies are de rigueur. We love all kinds of smoothies. Nearly every casual restaurant will offer at least several smoothies on their menu, and smoothie bars abound at the beach. Just the thought of a smoothie conjures up thoughts of sunshine, surfers, boardwalks, and beach volleyball.

The best part of smoothies is that they can be good-for-you drinks that are absolutely delicious, especially on a hot summer day. We have our favorites at the Grove and with our plentiful citrus crops, we are actually quite spoiled. If you have never tried blood orange juice, you absolutely must. Nothing can compare to the vibrant natural red color or the refreshing sweet and tart flavor. I hope you enjoy one of our favorite smoothie recipes.

Blood Orange Banana Smoothie
Serves 2
Ingredients:
12 oz. La Vigne Organics Blood Orange Juice
1 frozen very ripe banana
1 cup ice
4 oz. low-fat vanilla yogurt (optional)

Directions:
Thoroughly blend juice and banana together in blender. Add ice and blend to desired consistency. If you are using yogurt, blend in with ice. Pour smoothie into two serving glasses, and garnish with a slice of blood orange.

Photo by Carl Kravats


 

New Photos!



Carl Kravats, our friend and photographer for some current projects, just added a magnificent portfolio to his website all about us! We are so excited! In addition to taking pictures of all our products and fruits, Carl wandered around our 30-acre grove capturing various scenes.

Please visit his website and enjoy the images. At last you can see where your fruit comes from. Here's a sneak peak.

Blood Orange Tart


Here's a "you just got to try it"!!!  This handy dandy, quick as pie recipe for a blood orange tart with marscapone cheese.
It' not only tasty but it is beautiful, a treat for the ones you love. The joy is in the discovery of the use of La Vigne Organic Blood Orange juice as an ingredient and a new flavor treat with color.
   
Blood Orange Tart
This is a pass along recipe from a friend;original source unknown to me. 
Serves 10
Ingredients: 
Crust:
2 tsp. butter, softened
2 cups flour
½ tsp. salt
1 tsp blood orange zest or lemon zest
½ cup confectioner’s sugar
12 TBSP cold butter, cut into pieces
1 egg
1 tsp orange flavored Grand Marnier liqueur

Filling:
¾ cup La Vigne Organics Blood Orange Juice
1 blood orange, zested finely
¼ cup dark brown sugar
1/3-cup mascarpone cheese
3 large eggs
3 egg yolks
1 TBSP orange flavored Grand Marnier liqueur

Confectioners sugar and blood orange wedges for garnish

Directions:
Crust:
Butter an 11-inch fluted tart pan with removable bottom with 2 tsp butter and set aside. Make pastry by combining flour, salt, zest and confectioners sugar in a bowl. Add butter and cut in until the mixture resembles coarse crumbles.  Combine the egg and liqueur in a small bowl and add to the flour mixture.  Using a fork, stir until the mixture comes together. Turn dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead until dough is formed.  Shape into a flattened disk, wrap in plastic and transfer dough to the freezer for 15 minutes.

Place the dough on a floured surface and roll into a 13 inch round. Transfer the dough to the prepared tart pan and ease dough into the edges and up the side of the pan. Trim excess dough and transfer to the refrigerator for 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Remove the tart shell from the fridge and prick it all over with a fork.  Line the pastry with foil and fill with weights or beans.  Bake the crust till the edges run golden, approximately 15 minutes. Remove from the oven. Remove the weights and foil. Bake 10 more minutes. Remove and set aside to cool.

Filling:
Make the filling by combining the orange juice, zest, brown sugar and mascarpone in a bowl. Whisk until smooth. Add eggs and yolks one at a time, beating after each addition. Add the liqueur and beat until smooth. Pour filling into the tart shell. Bake until the filling is lightly browned and in spots the crust is golden (approximately 25 minutes). 

Garnish with blood orange segments and confectioners sugar.



Thursday, March 17, 2011

Outside My Back Door


I've always been a collector. It must be in my blood. And I love to collect antiques of all kinds. I have decorated my home, my office, and the grove with found treasures. A few yards from my back door is my office where my assistant, Debbie and I, work together happily. There's a whole long story, that I will tell you sometime, about our home, office, and all the out buildings.

We used a very talented landscape architect, Jim Yoch and a well known decorator, Gep Durenberger plus an incredible carpenter, Mark Pequet to enhance this property, when we bought it in 1982. This has been a living growing entity. 


Oh, and did I tell you about my cookbook collection? Not yet, but my cookbooks are among my fondest treasures. Cookbooks will be another hundred posts, but for now, I want to share a few images of what I see every morning when I walk out of my back door towards my office.

 All photos by Carl Kravats

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Kumquat Scones with Candied Ginger and Orange

Making these scones makes me happy because they always come out nicely, their easy to make, and friends always love them. The ginger and the kumquats compliment one another and provide a subtle reminder of the Orient wrapped up in a British scone. Put the kettle on! Time for scones and tea!


Photo by Carl Kravats

Kumquat Scones with Candied Ginger and Orange 
makes 8 scones
Pans and equipment: 
Two jellyroll or half-sheet pans, stacked one on top of the other (this "double panning" will prevent the bottom of the scones from over-browning).  Line the top pan with a sheet of parchment paper.

Ingredients:
¼ cup (1-3/4 ounces) sugar
Generous 1/3 cup (2 ounces) chopped candied ginger
2 cups (10 ounces) unbleached all purpose flour
¼ teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
Zest of 1 large orange, grated
1 stick (4 ounces) cold unsalted butter, chopped into ½-inch pieces
½ cup (3 ounces) La Vigne Organic Nagami Kumquat Conserve (to measure: first rinse, pat dry,  remove seeds, and chop each piece into quarters)
¾ cup (6 ounces) cold heavy whipping cream

Ingredients to Finish:
2 to 3 tablespoons of heavy whipping cream
Turbinado sugar, granulated sugar, or crystallized sugar

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 425 F.  Position an oven rack in the center of the oven.

Place the sugar and candied ginger in the bowl of a food processor and process until the ginger is very finely chopped.  Add the flour, salt, baking powder, orange zest and cold butter pieces and pulse until the butter is the size of small peas.

Transfer the mixture into a bowl (or a standing mixer fitted with the paddle attachment) and stir in the kumquats.  Pour in the cream and mix just until blended - do not beat or the scones will be tough.  Turn the mixture out onto a lightly floured surface and knead 2 or 3 times, just to bring the dough together.  Pat into a 7-inch circle, then use a large knife to cut the circle into eight equal wedges.  (At this point the scones can be refrigerated overnight, or frozen, well wrapped, for up to 1 month.)

Place the scones on the prepared sheet pan.  Brush the top of each scone with cream and sprinkle with sugar.  Bake for 15 to 18 minutes, or until firm to the touch and golden brown.  Remove from the oven and place on a rack to cool.

Here's our organic Kumquat Conserve that we used in the recipe.


Photo by Carl Kravats

Kumquats: A Good Place to Start

An introduction to kumquats seems like the best place to start. Yes, kumquats, the adorable little bright orange oval fruit that some people shy away from simply because they don't understand this little fairy goddess of nature.

To give you a little background: kumquats are a native to South Asia and the Asia Pacific. The earliest historical reference to kumquats appears in Chinese literature in the 12th century. Kumquats were introduced to Europe in 1846 by Robert Fortune who was a specimen collector for the London Horticultural Society. Shortly after that, they came to North America.

Photo by Carl Kravats

We grow the oval kumquats or the Nagami kumquat. I love to pop them in my mouth right off the tree. I usually eat the entire fruit which is about the size of a medium to large olive. The rind is sweet and the juicy center is sour and salty.

Kumquats are commonly used in jellies, jams, preserves and conserves. Savvy bartenders use them as a garnish to martinis instead of olives, and a kumquat liqueur is made by adding kumquats and sugar to gin or vodka to impart its unique sweet-tart flavor. After about three months the brew is ready to serve. Kumquats are more common in desserts in Europe than in the US. They give chefs a great way to show off their culinary talents.

As you can see, I'm an enthusiastic advocate for kumquats, and hope you are willing to try them if you already haven't.

 Photo by Carl Kravats