
My mother used to serve either honeydew or cantaloupe as dessert during summertime in our sunroom, windows open to catch the evening breeze. We ate our crescent-shaped slices with a combination of fork and knife, followed by spoon to catch all the remaining juices. Watermelon, on the other hand, seemed in a class by itself. Once sliced into requisite triangles and arranged on a platter, no reprimand ever resulted from grabbing it and running outside to eat it barefoot in the grass, juices streaming down the arms and chin.
This lovely summer recipe is a grown-up version of cantaloupe-as-dessert. I've adapted it from Gourmet magazine's August 2004 issue. The beauty of the presentation is simply the use of an ice cream scoop, to create long curls.
Simmer together in a 1-quart heavy saucepan:
1 cup dry red wine
2 tablespoons sugar
1 Turkish or California bay leaf
1 teaspoon mustard seeds
1 tablespoon pink peppercorns, crushed (optional)
Simmer until reduced to about 1/4 cup (10-15 minutes.) Remove from heat, and set saucepan in a bowl of ice and cold water. Discard the bay leaf.
Meanwhile, halve 2 ripe, chilled cantaloupes, discarding seeds. Use an ice cream scoop (not one with a lever) to scoop out curls and divide among four bowls along with juices. Just before serving, drizzle each serving with about 1 tablespoon of cooled spiced wine.
Note: Spiced wine can be made 1 week ahead and chilled in an airtight container.
Serves 4
Food Fact! A cantaloupe by any other name is still a cantaloupe. Cantaloupe refers to two varieties of muskmelon (Cucumis melo) a species in the family which includes nearly all melons and squashes. It is named reticulatus due to its net-like (or reticulated) skin covering. In Australia and New Zealand, it is called "rockmelon" due to the rock-like appearance of the skin of the fruit. A whole medium-sized cantaloupe is only about 188 calories.
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