Pineapple-Pear Mold
Submitted by Samson533
Pineapple-pear mold is a light, refreshing gelatin salad made with orange juice, crushed pineapple, and sliced pears. A retro potluck classic with no added sugar.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
15 minREADY
2 hrsThis pineapple-pear mold is the kind of mid-century gelatin salad that shows up at church suppers and summer picnics for a reason. It is cooling, barely sweet, and holds together without a single spoon of refined sugar. Orange juice does the heavy work here, both as the liquid that blooms and dissolves the unflavored gelatin and as the main flavor that ties the pineapple and pear together.
The timing trick is in the “partially set” stage. If you fold the fruit in while the gelatin is still fully liquid, everything sinks to the bottom. Wait too long and the mixture seizes before you can blend it in. The sweet spot is when the gelatin is thick like raw egg whites: still pourable, but loose enough that the pineapple and pear stay suspended. A 6-cup ring or bundt-style mold unmolds most cleanly when briefly dipped in warm (not hot) water.
Kitchen Tips
- Use fresh or canned pineapple; never frozen unfrozen, which contains an enzyme that prevents gelatin from setting.
- Lightly oil the mold with a neutral oil before pouring for easy release.
- Drain and pat the pears so excess juice does not thin the gelatin.
- Unmold onto a chilled plate for the cleanest presentation.
Variations
- Swap pears for sliced peaches or mandarin orange segments for a summery twist.
- Fold in chopped green bell pepper for a savory-sweet retro touch, as the original recipe suggests.
- Serve on a bed of butter lettuce with a dollop of sweetened sour cream for a classic salad presentation.
Ingredients
Directions
In a small saucepan soften gelatin in ½ cup of the orange juice.
Stir over low heat until gelatin is dissolved.
Stir in undrained crushed pineapple and the remaining orange Chill until partially set. Fold in pears and green pepper, if desired. Turn mixture into a 6-cup mold. Chill until firm. Unmold onto a plate.
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