    
Dried Pineapple
 Dried Pineapple © Denzil Green Dried Pineapple comes in chunks, sliced rings, and diced.
It is often treated with sulphur dioxide as a colour fixative to help them retain appealing yellow colour. Without it, dried pineapple can turn very brown.
Sometimes it is sold coated with sugar, to make a chewy, sweet snack with a bit of sourness that you can eat out of hand. Ones with no added sugar may be more sour,
It is not sticky.
Freeze-dried slices will be more like fruit leather, and chewier, browner, and drier.
Dried chunks of pineapple can be eaten out of hand, used in a trail mix, used in baking, in some Asian dishes or in pork dishes, or added to leafy salads,
Whole, dried pineapples are used for centrepieces, large festive wreathes, and mantlepiece decorations.
You can dry your own pineapple at home from fresh pineapple in a dehydrator on medium setting for 24 to 36 hours,
Thailand is the principle supplier to North America of dried pineapple.
Cooking Tips
To use in recipes, let stand covered in warm water for 5 minutes to reconstitute.
Substitutes
Another dried tropical fruit, such as mango, papaya, or dried apricots.
Equivalents
4 cups, chunked = 16 oz (450g)
1 pound (450g) slices = 4 cups, chunked
Also called: Dried Pineapple Chunks
Dried Pineapple Rings Ananas sechée (French) Ananastrocken (German) Piña seca (Spanish)
See Also
Pineapples
Other entries for Dried Fruit
Banana Leather, Currants, Dates, Dried Apples, Dried Banana, Dried Cranberries, Dried Pineapple, Figs, Prunes, Raisins, Tamarind
Other entries for Fruit
Bananas, Bletting, Candied Fruit, Citrus Fruit, Drupes, Hard Fruit, Olives, Rhubarb, Soft Fruit
Top...
| |
|