Dish

(Nandana) #1
light and fresh end to a spring meal. Tangelos
also go with pears, peaches, bananas, grapes,
guavas and rhubarb. And then there is the
heavenly combination of orange and chocolate.
And orange and ginger. Tangelos do the
business here better than an orange, I think.
Perhaps my favourite way to use tangelos is
in savoury dishes. Juice or segments should
be added towards the end of cooking because
tangelo juice looses its fresh notes when heated
and segments lose their bright colour and
structure. They’re a flavour corrector, too. A
good squirt of tangelo juice can level out the
oiliness of a dish, and help suppress saltiness
(add a dab of honey to mute excess saltiness).
Add a cup of segments with juice to a
Spanish chicken, red pepper and green olive
stew just before serving, and you’ll create a
flavour bomb. Spoon them through a Moroccan
chickpea, chorizo and harissa dish and sprinkle
the lot with chopped coriander, and you’ll
create a standout result. The acidity will make
the red pepper in the stew seem sweeter, and
will help define the spices in the chickpea dish.
I love them in salsa and fresh relish, too.
Any combination of chopped white peaches or

DISH 27

T


angelos are my pick of citrus fruit.
Yes, I love lemons for their fresh
scent and usefulness in the kitchen
but when it comes to eating citrus
as a fruit, it’s not much fun sucking on a lemon.
Tangelos, a hybrid between a sweet mandarin
and a grapefruit, are gorgeously sweet and sharp
at the same time. The acid gives a heightened
mouth-puckering thrill, to the point where
it almost induces a sweat, but mandarin’s
sweetness takes off the acid edge keeping the
overall effect balanced. Just! When squeezed,
the juice is bright in colour, tastes deeply of
orange and is fresh and pleasantly sweet.
There are several varieties of tangelo. Top of
the pile is the Minneola with its deep orange
pockmarked skin and distinctive elongated
neck and nippled top. It’s easy to peel – just get
your thumb under the bump at the top – and
has generous amounts of juice. Other varieties
include Orlando and Seminole.
It’s the acid in tangelos coupled with the
fruity orange taste that makes them so versatile
in the kitchen. They always look great, too,
with their deep orange juicy flesh. A bowl of
strawberries and segmented tangelos makes a


In season: tangelos


Sweet, sharp and fresh – these hybrid citrus fruits bring an unmistakable


brightness to light spring dishes, from a pop of orange in a tasty salad
to a delicious zing in a Spanish stew and much else in between.
Words — JULIE BIUSO / Photography — JOSH GRIGGS

nectarines, green or yellow pepper, red onion
or shallot, chopped coriander, mint or basil,
chopped olives or capers, will work. As will
chopped avocado, tangelo segments, red onion
and hot red chilli and fresh mint. Try this with
a black bean salad topped with sour cream, and
fill tacos, adding shredded pork belly, pan-fried
or barbecued fish fillets, or chopped char-grilled
chicken, to make it more substantial.
Fennel and orange is another curious combo
that works. Trim and finely slice fennel, dress
with extra virgin olive oil, tangelo juice, flaky
sea salt, crushed garlic and tangelo segments.
The fennel can sit around for 30 minutes or so
once dressed (with the tangelo juice), but add
segments just before serving. Garnish with a
shower of chopped chervil or fresh tarragon.
Add small black olives if liked, or finish with
capers sizzled in browning butter. Once you get
on a roll, the possibilities are endless. What you
are looking to create is a balance of acidity, a
tad of sweetness and a dollop of fruity flavours.
Spices like ginger, and herbs like mint and
tarragon, and extras like chillies, capers and
olives, add another dimension. You can make
tangelos work with fish and shellfish, and with
pork, turkey, chicken, duck, ham and lamb, and
with many fruits and some vegetables. It’s the
other ingredients that will pull it all together.

TANGELO
NOTE

The peel is loaded with
citrus oils. Grate and use like
a lemon, or add whole strips
to a casserole, or dry the rind
in a dehydrator and use as
a flavour accent when the
fresh fruit is not in
season.

Substitute tangelo juice for lemon in most desserts. Think lemon


tart, gelato, ice cream, granita, custards and the like, and in nut cakes


or sponges soaked in syrup, and other syrupy desserts like baklava.


Some oranges don’t have enough acidity to balance these sweet dishes,


but tangelos with their bitey little zing do the job well while adding a


notable orange presence.

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