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The class was inspirational, I felt like a member of the Loomis extended family. Susan was warm, delightful, organized and sharing. Her assistant made us laugh with her keen sense of humor. The food was seasonal, fresh and preparation was always imaginative. But this class was not just about food. We were caught up with Susan's excitement and enthusiasm for the beautiful, bountiful Normandy. It was like visiting your far away family and being very spoiled by them.
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Miche's Apricot Jam

Miche's Apricot Jam
La Confiture d'Abricot de Miche

I thought I already had the best recipe for apricot jam until I tasted Miche's. Miche is Edith's aunt and she lives about five minutes away from us in Louviers. In her eighty's, she is the voluntary grandmother to all of Edith's children and nieces and nephews—which numbered 28 at last count—and in summer she buys kilos of apricots to make this jam for them. She brought us a jar one cold February day and it tasted like summer in a jar, so intensely apricot-y that we all swooned. I immediately renounced my old recipe in favor of this one.

Miche is categoric—she makes the jam in small batches, uses as little sugar as possible, and cooks fruit for as short a time as she can get away with. She also refuses to put apricot pits in her jam—a typical French custom—for in her mind, anything that interferes with the pure, fresh apricot flavor is blasphemy. She's right, her apricot jam is out of this world.

On Rue Tatin, Cooking School in France with Susan Herrmann Loomis 3 pounds (1-1/2 kg) apricots, pitted and quartered
On Rue Tatin, Cooking School in France with Susan Herrmann Loomis 3 cups (600g) granulated sugar
  1. Place the apricots and the sugar in a non-reactive pan or bowl, stir, cover and let macerate for at least 12 hours.

  2. Transfer the fruit and sugar to a large, heavy saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat so the mixture is boiling merrily and cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove from the heat and ladle the jam into sterilized canning jars, leaving 1/4-inch headroom. Seal according to the jar manufacturer's instructions.

Yields about 10 cups (2-½ liters)

 

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