Fresh Strawberry Pie

20 06 2009

IMG_0912When it comes to birthdays, most of us eat cake. Sure, the kind varies — yellow with chocolate frosting, white cupcakes with sprinkles, even red velvet — but when it’s time to blow out the candles, you can bet we’re doing it over a cake.

Unless you’re my dad.

He favors fresh strawberry pie, and lucky for him, his birthday falls in berry season at the end of June. He was in town this week for ballet recitals, swim meets and the like, so I surprised him with an early birthday pie.

In a fresh berry pie, the filling is cooked over the stove then added to a pre-baked shell. The only tricky part is when you mix the crushed berries with sugar, cornstarch and lemon juice to make the glaze. Resist the temptation to put down the spoon and prep another dish; the glaze turns from cloudy to clear in an instant and you don’t want to miss it.

Fresh Strawberry Pie
Adapted from The Fannie Farmer Baking Book

5-6 cups strawberries, cleaned and hulled
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 cup sugar (more if the berries aren’t perfectly ripe)
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 pre-baked 9-inch pie crust
Whipped cream

Slice half the berries and crush the rest, keeping the two piles separate. Put the crushed berries in a small pan and add the cornstarch, sugar and lemon juice. Stir over low heat until the mixture thickens and turns clear. Put it in a different bowl (off the heat) to cool. Gently stir in the sliced berries and spoon into the crust. When ready to serve, top each slice with whipped cream.





Strawberry-Rhubarb Crisp

17 06 2009

IMG_0895Some people think I’m depriving myself by eating seasonally.

Yes, my consumption of leeks and butternut squash went up this winter as I chose those local veggies (from a storage share at my CSA) over crops like tomatoes and spinach that were grown somewhere else and shipped a long way. Did I miss out? No. I simply changed the way I planned menus — and discovered a lot of yummy soup recipes along the way.

When you eat seasonally, you experience cooking in an entirely different way. When something is in — as strawberries are now — they’re in in abundance, and you feel the freedom to experiment with new recipes. In my house, this meant trying something I’ve always enjoyed but had never made: strawberry-rhubarb crisp.

Both berries and rhubarb came from Berry Patch Farms in Brighton. We picked up the rhubarb before weighing and paying for our two flats of berries at the farm stand. If you’ve never cooked with rhubarb before, remember that the leaves are toxic so only prepare the reddish celery-like stalks. And like cranberries, rhubarb is very tart so it needs a good bit of sugar. Keep this in mind when reading recipes; I frequently cut the sugar by 1/3 or 1/2 when baking quick breads and the like, but don’t give in to this temptation when it comes to rhubarb.

Click here for the recipe for Rhubarb-Strawberry Crisp, written by Deborah Madison and published in Cooking Light.

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Strawberry Picking

14 06 2009

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Berry picking wasn’t originally on the schedule, not with two ballet recitals ahead of us and costumes to get ready. But there we were at 8:15 a.m., bouncing along in the first wagon of the day at Berry Patch Farms in Brighton. An email from owner Tim Ferrell had warned that the fields were likely to be picked out by 11. We didn’t want to miss it. Neither did several other members from my CSA, who were sharing the early wagon with us. “It’s a tradition,” one Monroe member from Denver told me. Every year she makes strawberry jam, strawberry ice cream and pie — and couldn’t let Monroe’s lost crop stand in her way.

Even with interruptions to watch toads hopping in the row, we quickly picked two overflowing flats, finding clusters of ripe berries hiding under every leaf. Back in the farmhouse they weighed in at 22 pounds, which, at $2.60 a pound wasn’t free (as it essentially would’ve been at our CSA), but it wasn’t nearly as pricey as organic berries at the store.

IMG_0827 By 9 a.m., lines were forming for the wagon but the atmosphere was still fun, not frantic. This meant that the owner had time to chat, answering my kids’ questions about how many animals they have and the location of their hives. Mr. Ferrell also told us he’s expanded the strawberry patch to meet demand. This fall, the farm will have seven pickable acres, with more on the way for next year.

On the trip home, we snacked on English peas picked an hour ago and purchased at the Berry Patch farmstand, and enjoyed the scent of ripe, warm berries. Given the rain, we quickly spread the 12 quarts of berries on cookie sheets and let them dry, then switched gears for ballet. Hours later, we popped three trays of berries in the freezer to save for next winter. Then we made strawberry shortcake, our favorite strawberry dessert, to cap off a great performance by our little ballerina.








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