---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05

     Title: Stuffed Turnips in Cider
Categories: Fruits/nuts, Seasonings, Side dish, Vegetables
     Yield: 4 servings

     4 md Turnips
     1 md Red bell pepper
          Salt and pepper; to taste
     2 tb Fresh tarragon or
   1/2 ts Dried tarragon
   1/2 ts Fresh thyme, packed, or
   1/4 ts Dried thyme (scant ts.)
     8 oz Lean ground lamb
     2 tb Dried currants
     1 sm Onion; peeled and minced
   1/2 ts Ground cinnamon
     1 lg Egg; lightly beaten
     1 sl White bread; crumbled
     1 tb Unsalted butter
     2 c  Extra-dry apple cider
     1    Bay leaf
   1/2 c  Heavy (whipping) cream*
          Rice (opt'l.)

 *If you want to serve these turnips over rice, increase the amount of cream
 to 1 cup, so there will be plenty of sauce to moisten the rice.

 Preheat the broiler.

 Peel the turnips.  Using a melon baller or a stiff vegetable peeler, hollow
 them out, leaving the sides and bottom approximately 3/8" thick. Reserve
 the turnip pulp for another use, such as adding to a soup or salad. Blanch
 the turnip shells in boiling salted water to cover until they have softened
 slightly, 2 to 3 minutes.  Drain; set aside.

 Place the red pepper on a piece of aluminum foil under the broiler and
 roast it, turning it as the skin blisters and turns black, which will take
 15 minutes.  Remove the pepper from the broiler, wrap it in the foil, and
 set it aside to steam, 10 to 15 minutes.  When it is cool enough to handle,
 peel it and remove the membranes and the seeds. Cut the pepper into 1/2"
 wide strips.

 Line each hollowed-out turnip with three strips of red pepper, then season
 with salt and pepper.  DIce any remaining pepper strips.

 Mince the tarragon and thyme.  In a medium-size bowl, combine the lamb,
 currants, onion, herbs, cinnamon, salt and pepper. Add the egg, bread and
 diced pepper; mix well.  To check the seasoning, saute a teaspoonful of the
 filling in a small pan over medium-high heat. Adjust seasoning to taste.
 Fill the turnips with the stuffing, mounding it slightly at the top.

 Melt butter in a medium-size saucepan over medium-high heat.  When it is
 foaming but not smoking, brown the turnips on all sides.  (This is a bit
 tricky because the turnips tend to roll around, but it is possible and does
 make a big difference to the dish.)

 When the turnips have browned, set them upright in the pan; pour the cider
 around them.  Add the bay leaf and bring the cider to a boil. Reduce heat
 to low, cover the pan, and let simmer until the stuffing is cooked through,
 25 to 30 minutes.  Remove the turnips from the pan and arrange them on a
 serving dish.  Cover with aluminum foil and keep warm in a low (200 F.)
 oven.

 Reduce cooking liquid by one third over medium-high heat, 5 minutes. Then
 whisk in the cream and continue to cook until the sauce has thickened
 slightly, 2 to 3 minutes.  Season with salt and pepper, and pour around the
 turnips.  Serve immediately.

 1987 Caymus Cabernet Sauvignon goes well with this.

 From _Farm House Cookbook_ by Susan Herrmann Loomis.  New York: Workman
 Publishing Company, Inc., 1991.  Pp. 247-248.  ISBN 0-89480-772-2.
 Electronic format by Cathy Harned.

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