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I had an unsuccessful experiment today. I tried running
hazelnuts and dried apricots through my Champion juicer. Shortly after starting, it was obviously that the juicer was bogging down too much, and I terminated the experiment. Hazelnuts alone work quite well, making a rather runny nut butter. I was hoping to create a more interesting flavor combination, with the apricots adding a little tartness and sweetness that the hazelnuts alone don't have. I didn't want to use apricot jam or preserves, because the hazelnut butter itself is runny enough. If I could make it a little stiffer, that would be nice. Also, I want the most concentrated flavors I can get, hence the dried fruit. I was alternating a small handful of nuts with a small handful of apricots, pushing them along with the tamper. Once I ran into trouble, I noticed the motor bogging down even without pushing more in with the tamper. At that point, I gave up rather than risk damaging the motor. Upon disassembly of the head, I found a very stiff deposit of mashed up apricot and hazelnut, just like what I was trying to create. Any suggestions how to proceed further? What sort of machine could handle dried apricots, turning them into a paste? I could perhaps make the hazelnut butter in the Champion, then combine it with the apricots made using some other machine, if I knew what that machine was. Perhaps a meat grinder? I considered dicing the apricots before adding them to the Champion, but the problem seemed not to be reduction of the apricots from whole, but the formation of the stiff paste inside the head. I've been considering buying a commercial Waring blender, but I'm doubtful that would be useful for this purpose. I've been thinking maybe I could freeze the apricots solid, then attack them with some sort of machine optimized for reduction of solids. But what would that machine be? Certainly not a grain mill. |
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