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In article >, Mark Thorson
> wrote: > I had an unsuccessful experiment today. I tried running > hazelnuts and dried apricots through my Champion juicer. > Shortly after starting, it was obviously that the juicer was > bogging down too much, and I terminated the experiment. > > Hazelnuts alone work quite well, making a rather runny > nut butter. I was hoping to create a more interesting > flavor combination, with the apricots adding a little > tartness and sweetness that the hazelnuts alone don't > have. I didn't want to use apricot jam or preserves, > because the hazelnut butter itself is runny enough. > If I could make it a little stiffer, that would be nice. > Also, I want the most concentrated flavors I can get, > hence the dried fruit. > > I was alternating a small handful of nuts with a small > handful of apricots, pushing them along with the tamper. > Once I ran into trouble, I noticed the motor bogging > down even without pushing more in with the tamper. > At that point, I gave up rather than risk damaging the > motor. Upon disassembly of the head, I found a very > stiff deposit of mashed up apricot and hazelnut, just > like what I was trying to create. > > Any suggestions how to proceed further? What sort > of machine could handle dried apricots, turning them > into a paste? I could perhaps make the hazelnut butter > in the Champion, then combine it with the apricots > made using some other machine, if I knew what that > machine was. Perhaps a meat grinder? > > I considered dicing the apricots before adding them > to the Champion, but the problem seemed not to be > reduction of the apricots from whole, but the formation > of the stiff paste inside the head. > > I've been considering buying a commercial Waring > blender, but I'm doubtful that would be useful for this > purpose. > > I've been thinking maybe I could freeze the apricots > solid, then attack them with some sort of machine > optimized for reduction of solids. But what would that > machine be? Certainly not a grain mill. What if you chopped the apricots in a food processor - a little sugar would help keep from sticking. Then add the hazelnut butter and process until you had the paste. JAT. -- -Barb, <www.jamlady.eboard.com> Updated 9-18-04; Sushi Story "Peace will come when the power of love overcomes the love of power." -Jimi Hendrix, and Lt. Joe Corcoran, Retired; St. Paul PD, Homicide Divn. |
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