Back Plum dumplings are my very favorite dessert. They are best made in the fall when the
small Italian prune plums are available.
When these are cooked, the steaming hot plum juices are a wonderful
treat as you cut them open. Bread crumbs
and cinnamon sugar enhance the flavors and textures. Traditionally, plum
dumplings are made with fresh potatoes, and take a lot of work .
Here is a recipe that is much easier than my mother’s, thanks to
Potato Buds. 3 cups Potato Buds
about 12 small, ripe
plums, pitted (If the pits do not come out easily, the plums are not ripe
enough); place a cube of sugar in the
center of each plum
salt
Bread crumbs lightly
browned in butter
Cinnamon
Sugar Place 3 cups of water into
a 2 quart pyrex measuring cup. Place in
microwave and bring to a boil (about 12 minutes) or cook water in a
conventional pan on the stove. Make sure the pan is large enough. When the
water is boiling, remove from microwave or stove and add the three cups of
Potato Buds. If the container is small,
it may boil over at this point. Stir
constantly until potato is absorbed. It
should feel like a medium soft mashed potato mixture.
Add salt (but no milk or butter
as per package directions). Let chill
completely. You can do this part the
day before serving if you wish. Bring water to boil in a
large pot on the stove, not microwave. When potato is completely
chilled, add 2 eggs and enough flour to make a soft dough. Mix well and turn out onto a well-floured
board. Kneed dough for a few minutes
until smooth and holds together well.
Add flour if dough is too sticky.
The dough should be easy to work with.
Roll the dough into a snake about 3 inches thick. Cut or pinch off a chunk of dough and
flatten to about 3/8 inch thick and about 4 inches x 4 inches approximately. Completely cover each plum with dough, smoothing and sealing completely If the dough is not thick enough, add more flour. Continue using flour to make the dough easy
to manage. Place each dumpling on a
well-floured tray. When all are ready, place
them carefully in the rapidly boiling water.
Stir continually to keep them from sticking on the bottom. After about 12 minutes, take one out to
test. The dough is
cooked when it is firm and no longer tastes raw—that makes a lot of sense, but
you’ll know. Cut in half.
The plum should be cooked and the juices
running out all over the plate. If the dough is cooked,
remove the rest from the water and serve immediately. Sprinkle with the toasted bread crumbs and cinnamon sugar. If, by any chance, you have left-over dumplings, they will still
be good the next day. Chill until
serving. Then heat in the microwave,
approximately 1 ½ minutes per dumpling,
being careful when you cut it open, as the plum will be very hot. To freeze,
place them in a ziplock bag and freeze them.
To serve, defrost and heat in the microwave. Then top with toasted crumbs and cinnamon sugar. Fortunately, we can only have these in the
fall when the plums are available or I would really be in trouble. I am told they can also be made with
apricots—I haven’t tried that yet, but it should be wonderful! ©
2005 All Rights Reserved
Plum Dumplings/Silvás Gomboc
Ingredients:
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