How about a Cherry Clafouti
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_5460,00.html
or
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_2436,00.html
Posted by Kathleen at July 19, 2004 12:10 PMI love cherries almost more than chocolate, and have been known to have a big bowl of cherries as the main course of dinner! But I don't think I'd enjoy pitting them either. What about cherry pie, my mom used to make that when I was a kid, and it was to die for!
Posted by Brenda at July 19, 2004 12:15 PMWhen cherry pitting became the pits, here's what my Mom would do.
Stick all the cherries in a big pot. Add a bit of water. Bring to a boil then simmer till the cherries are soft and squishy. Put the mess in a big sieve (only half fill the sieve at a time, or if you have one of those old cone shaped colander thingys with the wooden squisher so much the better)Mush through as much of the cherry goop as you can. the pits stay behind. You now have nice cherry mush for jam, pudding sauce or whatever. If you are as thrifty as my Mom, you take the stones and mess from the sieve, put it back on the stove with more water, boil and simmer, strain, add sugar, boil again and have cherry pancake syrup. None of this involves pitting.
I think you should continue to call it the "cherry aran". When people ask why it is named that, you look at them like they're crazy and say, "well, isn't obvious?" then sniff and walk away.
Barb B.
I like the jam idea. Make it freezer jam and it's even easier. Though what you would do with hundreds of jars of cherry jam is beyond me. On second thought, the beer may be the best idea. Leave the cherries on the tree; the birds need to eat something, right??
Posted by Lorette at July 19, 2004 12:38 PMRepression is the only answer, obviously. Along with perhaps more beer/wine/any other liquor other than Kirsch Likör or cherry beer... hey, gift a brewer with the cherries and sit back and wait for the output...
Posted by Chris at July 19, 2004 1:00 PMOh, for goodness sake, Stephanie. You aren't leaving the cherries alone are you? In a bowl, all naked and rolling around on each other?
Clearly, they are breeding when unsupervised, and the only solution is to fashion little knitted slingshots, with which to fire the cherries - one at a time - at the Ukranian arguers, and the neighborhood children.
Otherwise, you may never be able to knit a bobble again without fear of thinking of cherries.
Posted by Amie at July 19, 2004 1:07 PMStephanie,
You are priceless. Erma Bombeck has nothing on you. I say make some cherry wine. I have no idea how to do it, but the resourceful Harlot is sure to think of a way.
Posted by Nathania at July 19, 2004 1:29 PMI looked all over for a recipe for Cherry Beer, but instead found this one (The Countess at Newport's Cherry Wine) at http://home.sunlitsurf.com/~mshapiro/cwinerec.html :
Pick the best cherries free from rotten, and
pick the stalks from them; put them into an
earthen Pan. Bruise them, by griping and
straining them in your hands, and let them
stand all night; on the next day strain them
out (through a Napkin, which if it be a
course and thin one, let the juyce run
through a Hippocras or gelly bag, upon a
pound of fine pure Sugar in powder, to every
Gallon of juyce) and to every gallon put a
pound of Sugar, and put it into a vessel. Be
sure your vessel be full, or your wine will
be spoiled; and in every bottle you must put
a lump (a piece as big as a Nutmeg) of Sugar.
The vessel must not be stopt until it hath
done working.
(And the Aran is lovely looking... Is this the handspun??)
Posted by Chelsea at July 19, 2004 1:30 PMAran? What Aran? What did I miss? Is this hubby's hand-spun?
Details!
Posted by MaryB at July 19, 2004 1:41 PMMmm. Cherry beer. With Upside Down Cherry Cake. Mmm.
Posted by Samina at July 19, 2004 2:40 PMIs that the Must Have Cardi? It must be. I finished mine, but I knitted the buttonband too tight and now I have to rip it . I love the pattern, though it's not really a challenge for you. Nice work with you new pitter - very clever.
Posted by Julia at July 19, 2004 2:41 PMHere is a question to take your mind off the cherries (if only for a brief moment): What is that beautiful tile behind the bowl of cherries in that first photo?
Posted by yarrrn at July 19, 2004 2:46 PMmmm...If I had cherries like that, I'd be making cordials.
Freeze cherries. (this breaks down cell walls)
Thaw cherries.
Mush cherries.
Put cherries in a jar and cover with vodka. Add some lemon zest. cover jar and put in dark place.
couple of months later....
Strain cherry/vodka mush through coffee filters. Add sugar syrup mixture and bottle.
mmmm...
Posted by KnitSteph at July 19, 2004 4:32 PMoohhh... cherry cordial. ...drool...
And, I almost lost it about the Ukranian argument. That's just hilarious!
Posted by melissa at July 19, 2004 6:55 PMoh oh i got it!how about cherry wine?? or even better..chocolate covered cherries mmmm.and really stop teasing us with cherries already,just invite us all over and we eat 'em up for ya!
Posted by sue at July 19, 2004 9:23 PMLet's see...when's the next flight to Toronto...
Posted by Jon at July 19, 2004 10:02 PMPLEASE.
SEND.
CHERRIES.
Can she make a cherry pie, Billy Boy, Billy Boy?
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/kids/lyrics/billyboy.htm
or if you prefer... Grab a piece of cherry pie and brew up a pot of some "damn fine coffee"- FBI agent Dale Cooper (Twin Peaks)
Kirsebærlikør
Rinse cherries and drain.
Fill a 1 liter canning jar half full of cherries.
Fill the jar up to 3-4 cm from the top with sugar
Pour in 45% alcohol (this was where it was nice to know a teetotalling dentist - they had a quota from the state monopoly) until the sugar is completely covered.
Cover tightly.
Shake the jar until everything is well mixed and the sugar begins to dissolve.
Let this concoction stand at room temperature until some time in December, turning the jar a couple of times a day.
Strain the liqueur off and bottle it.
Eat the berries for dessert with whipped cream or over ice cream or fromage.
And if you are a basic Norwegian, the final step is apparently sucking on the stones.
This is the basic version - the citified version pits at least half the cherries and adds 8 - 10 cloves and a cinnamon stick - it also weighs the cherries and the sugar.
Posted by Elizabeth in Norway at July 20, 2004 4:04 AMLovely start to the sweater, cherry or otherwise. i'm sure the Dublins are crying in their prison!!! And just for the record, you're the one that has inspired me to finish my abandoned and rejected-for-flashier projects. Now what am I to do? While your nightmares probably feature cherries, mine featured the the abandoned knitting and tauntings by my acquisitions from the Fleece Artist. I dare not start a new creation until ALL others are done. Talk about punishment!!!
So about those frozen cherries: does that mean that the sewing up party will be fortified by baked cherry goodies??
I'll be right over, just say the word. And then I'll bake the cherry pies for the sewing party?! ( I did not like cherry pie until I baked one from scratch. Perhaps that's why you are hesitating on the pie front, a bad expereince with that glutaneous muck that is often passed off for filling???)
Posted by Elizabeth at July 20, 2004 9:57 AMDried cherries won't take up room in your freezer and will taste yummy in oatmeal when January rolls around. I pay almost $6 for 8 oz. of dried cherries in the winter. (Sour cherries are supposed to have a some compound that is beneficial for arthritis pain....there's a study out of Michigan State U.)
Posted by Valerie at July 20, 2004 10:38 AMTsingtao beer? Ganbai! Now stop mocking me with your abundance of cherries.
Posted by alison at July 21, 2004 4:51 AMLate to the party again. Ah well..
http://www.bizrate.com/buy/products__cat_id--13000100,keyword--Cherry%20Pitter.html
Many many cheap cherry stoners/pitters here. Seems worth the money to me.
now, I must go have some cherry jam on my english muffin!
:)