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Compote

Rhubarb and Strawberry Compote With Fresh Mint

Serve the compote over vanilla or strawberry ice cream, angel food cake, pancakes, or waffles.

Warm Rhubarb Compote with Walnut-Coconut Crunch

One of our favorite spring ingredients— rhubarb—shines in this dessert. The compote can be served warm, at room temperature, or cold.

Prunes in Wine with Toasted-Almond Cookies

Prunes take on a velvety texture in this Port sauce. The resulting syrup is silky and sweet, with a tropical vanilla fragrance.

Ricotta Tart with Dried-Fruit Compote

This gently sweet ricotta tart provides a creamy base to a rich compote of dried fruit, which includes figs, sour cherries, and apricots (we much prefer the tangy California kind over Turkish). It's much lighter than a cheesecake, but it hits all the right spots. The Miraglia family likes the tart chilled, but we also loved it at room temperature.

Pineapple in Ginger Rum Syrup

Juicy pineapple with a nip of rum and ginger is a sophisticated compote that complements bites of the pecan spice cake (recipe precedes) but also makes a satisfying light dessert on its own.

Cherry Compote

Because fresh fruit was once scarce in Sweden during the winter, compotes stewed from dried fruits (mixed with a little alcohol to take the nip off the cold) are traditional at Christmas julbord. Here, dried cherries simmered with red wine and Port are subtly spiced with cinnamon and black pepper. This compote partners beautifully with cheese, which is how Magnus Ek serves it; we've also found that it complements the rice pudding in place of warm milk and sugar.

Lemon Cloud Tart with Rhubarb Compote

A filling of lemon curd folded into whipped crème fraîche gives this tart its billowy and ethereal texture.

Rhubarb Compote

Chai-Poached Apricots and Plums

More elegant than jam but just as handy, this compote goes with almost everything.

Persimmon Cranberry Sauce

The bright, tender fruit of Fuyu persimmons mellows the intensity of cranberries while lending this sauce a beautiful jewel-like hue. Using Fuyus, which can be eaten hard or soft, removes the guesswork of finding ripe fruit.

Cranberry Quince Sauce

This sauce, a mix of everyday and exotic, provides a sweet and tart contrast to rich meat or poultry.

Candied-Orange and Cranberry Compote

This is a sweet dessert compote — it does not go with the turkey. The oranges are cooked to make sure all the bitterness is released, so it's important that they're sliced very thin — an extremely sharp thin-bladed knife is best for the task.

Cranberry Apricot Compote

This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.