1.
In vanilla ice cream. One of my local ice cream places has sold Christmas
pudding ice cream for years, and it is one of their most popular flavors. If
you are making homemade vanilla ice cream, add the mincemeat just before the
ice cream is frozen to your satisfaction—at the same time you would add nuts or
broken cookies to the mixture. If you want to be really decadent, make pumpkin
ice cream and add the mincemeat, or put a scoop of mincemeat ice cream on top
of your apple pie.
(Or,
microwave good quality, store-bought vanilla ice cream for 30 seconds to soften
the ice cream enough to stir in the mincemeat.)
2.
As chutney or in a sauce. Use mincemeat alongside any meat or game that goes
well with apples or dried cranberries/raisins, such as ham, chicken, and duck.
My grandmother even serves it alongside her roast beef. You also can add it to
your reduction sauce for your roast chicken or duck. Again, at the last minute,
stir it in. It really adds depth of flavor.
3.
In Greek yogurt as a snack. Whether it’s vanilla or plain Greek yogurt, this might
become your new favorite snack, as it is mine!
4.
In your favorite apple crumble (crisp) recipe. Just add a liberal amount to your apple mixture, thereby
eliminating the need for any sugar and spice you might otherwise use. (You can also
cut down on the amount of sugar and spice you use for your crumble topping.)
5.
For the ubiquitous, post-Thanksgiving turkey
sandwiches. In America , at
least, we are always looking for creative ways to use the turkey leftovers.
This November 25 I will be trying my homemade mincemeat on top of the usual
turkey breast, stuffing and white bread sandwich (which I like almost as much
as the meal from the day before). If your mincemeat has dried cranberries in it
like mine does, why wouldn’t it be as good as cranberry sauce or cranberry
pepper jelly?
Please write and tell me other
ways you use mincemeat!
My mother suggests putting mincemeat in a crepe, with ice cream on top. Though clearly brandy butter would be more decadent...
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