Galileo’s menu
Frutta — the sweet preserve for the end of the meal

Cotognata (quince paste)

PreservingDocumented🍯 🍋moyen1 h 30 (+ drying)

A dense, fragrant fruit paste made by cooking quinces long with sugar (or honey) until translucent, then dried and cut into diamonds. Tart, perfumed, it keeps all winter.

Frutta — the sweet preserve for the end of the meal

A dense, fragrant fruit paste made by cooking quinces long with sugar (or honey) until translucent, then dried and cut into diamonds. Tart, perfumed, it keeps all winter.

My dear daughter Maria Celeste, from the convent of San Matteo adjoining my house at Arcetri, would send me these quince pastes she cooked with her sisters — a gift sweeter than any letter. The fruit, hard and harsh when raw, becomes tender and amber through long cooking: a marvel of transformation I observed with the same curiosity as the phases of Venus. Cut a diamond, let it melt slowly, and think that it will last all winter without spoiling.
Galileo
Ingredients
  • Ripe quincesseveral, well-scented (base fruit)
  • Sugar (or Tuscan honey)equal weight to pulp (preservative and sweetness)
  • Lemon zesta little (fragrance and acidity)
How it was made : Quinces, rich in pectin, were one of the few fruits that could be preserved long before refrigeration: cooked into a firm paste, they kept for months. Tuscan convents made large supplies, and the word 'marmalade' comes from Portuguese marmelo, quince.