Category: Fruit

Blueberry Cobbler with a Cornmeal-Sugar Cookie Crust

Blueberry Cobbler with a Cornmeal-Sugar Cookie Crust

Have you been watching A Chef’s Life on PBS? You should. It follows Chef Vivian Howard who after hobnobbing in NYC for a couple of years moved back home to North Carolina and opened a farm to table restaurant. We are not talking Asheville or Charlotte, urban areas where the culinary scenes are blossoming but in her hometown of Kinston (where? get out your AAA map). From Kinston, she is creating beautiful down-home Southern food using local ingredients.
I may never find myself in Kinston but fortunately, she has written a cookbook, Deep Run Roots, that is filled with tantalizing recipes, gorgeous photos and wonderful stories about her hometown, family and friends. It’s a hefty book organized by ingredients and as I flipped through it I found myself marking quite a few of the recipes.

One of the many recipes I bookmarked with a post-it note was the Blueberry Cobbler with Cornmeal Sugar Cookie Crust.  Actually ,I might have put 2 sticky notes on it as I am a sucker for homey desserts like cobblers.  Start early if you want to make this as both the crust and the blueberries need “sitting” time. While the dough for the topping chills, the blueberries macerate in sugar and lemon juice.  Let me just tell y’all now, this cobbler is AMAZING.  The crust is tender and buttery with an ever so slight crunch from the cornmeal, it literally melts in your mouth.  Bubbling underneath is a sweet blueberry compote brightened by lemon zest and juice.  Of course, I took it up another notch by adding a scoop of vanilla ice cream.  Sometimes you just gotta go for it.

The nitty gritty.  I haven’t quite figured out the different types of cornmeal, stone ground vs. regular milled I am definitely open to advice or info on the different kinds.  I used Bob’s Red Mill Stone Ground Corn Flour which is pretty fine with just a slight crunch.  I tried fine stone ground cornmeal in scones before and was not crazy about the grittiness.  I guess I would choose whichever cornmeal you use and like for cornbread for this cobbler.

The crust is not a dough you would roll.  It is similar to a drop cookie dough.  I scooped out 1/3-1/2 cup portions and used saran wrap (it’s sticky) to shape the dough into 1/2 inch thick discs for my ramekins.  You could do the same for a 9×12 pan or any comparable sized baking dish and lay the discs side by side covering as much fruit as possible.

If using ramekins reduce the baking time to about 30 minutes.  Make sure to use a tray or sheet as they will bubble over (a picture is worth a thousand words).  I made half the recipe filling which filled four one cup ramekins.  I stashed the extra dough in the fridge for another day.

I plan on trying different berries and seasonal fruits with this recipe.  I’m already dreaming about  mixed berries (strawberries, blackberries and blueberries) and summer stone fruit (peaches, nectarines, plums) versions.

Blueberry Cobbler with Cornmeal Sugar Cookie Crust from Deep Run Roots

Course comfort food, Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword blueberry, butter, cobbler, cornmeal, vivian howard

Ingredients

For the Filling:

  • 2 pound fresh blueberries or fruit of choice berries, stone fruit
  • 3/4 to 1 cup sugar
  • 4 tablespoons lemon juice
  • Zest of 2 lemons removed with microplane
  • 1 teaspoon salt

Cornmeal Sugar Cookie Crust:

  • 1 1/2 cups or 3 sticks unsalted butter softened
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 tablespoon light brown sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup A.P. flour
  • 1 cup cornmeal
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

Instructions

Make the Filling:

  • Put all the ingredients in a bowl and press down with the back of a spoon to burst some of the berries. Stir it all together and cover.
  • Let the berries and sugar hang out for about two hours or overnight, stirring when it’s convenient.
  • After about two hours, lots of juice would have leeched out of your fruit. Strain the juice and and add it to a small saucepan. Reduce the juice by half, or until it’s nice and syrupy. Add the syrupy stuff back to your fruit and stir to combine. It should coat and cling to the fruit like that scary cherry pie filling from the can.

Make the Crust:

  • Combine the flour, baking powder and salt in a small bowl. Cream together the butter and sugars in a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment until light and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and paddle to incorporate. Slowly add the flour until just combined.
  • Remove the dough from the bowl, cover it well with plastic wrap, and let it rest. The cookie dough can be made several days in advance. You could even make a larger batch, freeze it.

Assemble the Cobblers:

  • Butter your 9x12 oven-safe dish and spoon the fruit into it. Or if you have ramekins/souffle dishes you can make individual servings.
  • What’s important is the filling to topping ratio. For every 1 1/2 inch of filling, you want 1/2 inch cookie crust. If your dishes go deeper, just increase both by the ratio.
  • If your topping is chilled, allow it to come to room temperature. Generally for something like this, you would be instructed to flour your work surface and roll out the dough, but for this recipe, that doesn’t really work. So just take your hands, grab a nice ball of the soft, kind of sticky dough and flatten it out between your palms until it’s approximately 1/2 inch thick. Lay that flattened, irregular disk on top of the fruit and move on to your next handful. The goal is to pretty much cover the fruit filling, without overlap but with very little exposed fruit in between. (I used plastic wrap to shape the dough)
  • Ideally you want to place the baking dish on top of a larger cookie sheet because, chances are, it’s going to bubble over, and I think that’s a good thing (unless I’m washing the dishes).
  • Bake it at 350 for about an hour. The top should be really nice and brown, not pale, but dark golden and slightly crispy looking.
  • Individual dishes will bake in less time, approximately 30 minutes.

Tips/Techniques

  • We’ve used the obvious like blueberries, blackberries, cherries, strawberries, plums, apricots and peaches for sure. But we’ve also used figs, apples, oranges, and a combination of tangerines and cranberries for a festive looking holiday cobbler. Feel free to combine fruits and add spices to suit the occasion. Clove, allspice and cinnamon work well with fruits like fig and apple.

 

Apple Crisp (How Do You Like Them Apples)

Apple Crisp (How Do You Like Them Apples)

My consolation for summer ending is the arrival of Fall, the magical transition that eases us into the coming colder months.  The air is crisp and cool without the icy sting of winter.  I love how the trees drop their leaves creating a carpet of orange and yellow hues.  Yes, I will miss summer’s yummy bounty but the fall season has its rewards. From our weekly trek to the farmer’s market, we will bring home a variety of beautiful apples and pears instead of peaches and plums.  Not a bad trade-off.

dsc04790Too lazy to make a pie I mulled over what to do with the apples, my aha moment came quickly, APPLE CRISP.

Let me get straight to the point.

There is never enough oatmeal, sugar, and buttery goodness blanketing the apples.  Are you with me?  Oh yeah, you are.  More buttery, crunchy, sweet topping, please.  Don’t get me wrong, I love the apple filling-warm, slightly sweet, and spiced with cinnamon and mace.  But I freely admit to being a topping junkie.  My go-to recipe is an adaptation of one I found in The Family Baker by Susan Purdy and yes, she too thinks you can never have enough of the crumble topping.  Feel free to tweak this recipe to your liking. When my kids were little they liked all things sweet. This meant I used only golden delicious apples (sometimes I snuck in a Fuji).

I use a mix similar to my apple pie such as Pippins, Jonagolds, Mutsus, and Fujis in a 1:1 ratio now.  Explore your farmer’s market, there are so many great apples to try.  Ask your friendly apply purveyor which ones hold up well when baked.  I also add pecans to my crisp, I’m sure walnuts or almonds would work well too.  The original recipe calls for nutmeg, I like to use mace.

But, whatever you do…

Don’t forget a scoop or two or three of vanilla ice cream.  That makes it even better!

How Do You Like Them Apples (Apple Crisp)

Ingredients

Filling:

  • 5-6 apples peeled, cored and sliced (~6 cups of apples) any combination of apples. For a more tart filling use Pippins or Granny Smiths. For a sweeter filling use a combination of Fuji's, Golden Delicious and Pippins (approximately 2 of each)
  • 1/4 cup dark brown sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 t grated nutmeg or mace
  • juice of 1/2 lemon
  • dash of salt

Topping (yum)

  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 3/4 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup old fashioned oatmeal not instant or quick cook
  • 1 stick of unsalted butter softened
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • Mix topping ingredients with pastry blender or fingers until crumbly.
  • 1/2 cup chopped pecans or walnuts optional

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  • Butter a 9 inch deep dish casserole or gratin dish.
  • Combine sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt and lemon juice with apples.
  • Pour apple mixture into dish. Top with crumble mixture.
  • Bake for approximately 40-50 minutes until topping is browned and apples are soft when pierced with a knife.
  • Serve warm with vanilla ice cream or custard sauce.
Strawberry Jam, Beyond Stupid Easy

Strawberry Jam, Beyond Stupid Easy

I still haven’t made that transition to feeding two instead of five.  This is no more evident than when I go to the farmer’s market.  At my favorite vendor, I linger over baskets of beautiful, ripe strawberries.   I pop one in my mouth, hmmm yum, they taste as good as they look.  Okay,  STOP.  Yes, the berries are wonderful but it’s only Wes and me.  Well, there’s Sammy, but he doesn’t eat strawberries.  I really should buy just one basket.  But no, I pick up a three-pack, and Ruiz, who I have known for years, adds more berries on top.  Well, at least I didn’t buy a half flat.  A three-pack is still too many berries.  What to do.

Toast with Strawberry Jam

Berries in the Air, Berries Everywhere

I had read about a new bread baker named Josey who collaborated with Four Barrel coffee to open a shop called The Mill in The City.  Coffee and toast are their game. I LOVE toast and I LOVE coffee.  Am I the only idiot I know who owns a cookbook all about toast.  Made a mental note to try The Mill and finally dragged my friend Mel with me to check it out.  As soon as we walked in the average age jumped at least 10 years.  Music played on a retro turntable and everyone else was dressed in skinny jeans, glasses, a cool slouchy hat, and Vans.

Yes, Welcome to Hipsterville.

We stood in line (yes, a line for toast) got to the front, and ordered.

ME:  “I’ll have a slice of country bread with fresh strawberry jam and a latte…

HIPSTER SERVER:  Ok, that will be 8 dollars” Whaat? Ok, keep cool Deb, try not to act like an incredulous old fart.  Yes, I could get a bowl of noodles in Chinatown for less but sans Madonna on vinyl or copies of the New York Times.  I have to admit the toast and jam were delicious.

The fresh berry jam at The Mill was the perfect answer to my extra strawberries   I wanted a simple delicious jam, like theirs.  I wasn’t looking to make jam that I could preserve.  No canning for me thanks to a long-ago article in Reader’s Digest about one family’s nightmare with canned veggies and botulism.  I was scarred for life.

Bingo, I found a recipe for jam that you could make and keep in the fridge or freeze and it is INCREDIBLY STUPID EASY.  If in fact I were selling a book and I included this recipe I would feel silly.  But, if I didn’t tell you about it you might never know something this stupid easy exist.  Luckily this blog is free. Here is the long list of ingredients you will need-strawberries, sugar, lemon juice.  That’s it.

Toast with Jam

So, there you go.  An easy way to use all those strawberries that you couldn’t resist.  Simmer it to the desired thickness.  Be sure to keep an eye on it as it reduces.  Stir to keep it from sticking and burning.  Mine was thick like a classic jam after about an hour on the stove. Reduce the time for jam more like the Mill’s, looser and chunkier.  I added a tiny bit of vanilla to keep everyone guessing.

You can also use a combination of blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries which would be gorgeous and amazing.  I plan to try lime juice instead of lemon or perhaps add a few chili flakes for some zing.

Here’s to Toast, Homemade Jam, and Summer.

Beyond Stupid Easy Fresh Strawberry Jam

A quick and easy freezer berry jam.
Course Breakfast
Cuisine American
Keyword Berry jam, blueberry, jam, Strawberry
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour

Ingredients

  • 4 cups halved strawberries or blueberries, raspberries, blackberries or combination
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
  • 1/4 tsp vanilla extract or paste optional
  • 1/4 tsp lemon zest optional

Instructions

  • Combine strawberries and sugar in a medium saucepan, let it sit and macerate for approximately 10 minutes.
  • Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat, stirring frequently.
  • Reduce heat to medium low, and simmer until desired thickness (loose and runny 15-20minutes, thick approximately 40 minutes to an hour) stirring occasionally.
  • Remove from heat, and stir in lemon juice and zest. A dash of salt if desired to round out flavor.
  • Cool to room temperature.
  • Can be stored in refrigerator for approximately 1 month or in the freezer for up to 6 months.
Peche a Trois’ (Peach Hand Pies)

Peche a Trois’ (Peach Hand Pies)

I am going to miss Jamie’s and my weekly forays to the farmer’s market.  Not that the season is ending, but Jamie heads back to Houston this coming week so there goes my kitchen buddy for a while. We found some luscious peaches at the market (it’s been a good summer for peaches) and coincidentally Smitten Kitchen  posted a recipe for peach pie.  As Jamie perused the recipe she said “Is it hard to make pie crust?”  Well, what kind of mom would I be if I didn’t lay a little pie crust wisdom on my kid before she heads back to college? Kind of like a lovely parting gift.
Though the Smitten Kitchen peach pie served as our inspiration, we decided to make peach hand pies instead.  Fingers over forks is our mantra so hand pies are the perfect ending for our final summer happy hour gathering.  Luckily, Smitten Kitchen also has a recipe for Bourbon Peach Hand Pies.
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We turned to a favorite pie crust recipe from Julia and Jaques Cooking at Home.  It’s a great recipe to teach pie crust 101 making.  It has a high proportion of butter so it’s yummy and flaky and it is easy to work with.
COLD, COLD, COLD.  Did I say to keep things cold? Butter and shortening.  I cut my butter and shortening or lard into pieces and put them back in the fridge while I measure out my flour.

LESS IS MORE, DON’T OVER-PROCESS OR OVERWORK YOUR PIE CRUST

Place your flour, sugar, and salt in the food processor and pulse a couple of times to mix.  Scatter your COLD butter and shortening or lard on top and PULSE mixture until the butter is approximately the size of peas.  At this point, you can pour your flour mixture into a bowl or you can continue using your processor.

Add ICE-COLD Water

 to your flour mixture and pulse until it just begins to clump then STOP.  Do not overdo it, especially if using the food processor or you end up with tough pie crust, yuck.
If you are not using the processor.  Sprinkle water on the flour mixture and stir with a fork until mixture begins to clump and come together.
Reserve one tablespoon of water, if the dough still seems dry or does not hold together add the remaining one tablespoon water.
At this point for either method, gather the dough into a disc on a sheet of plastic wrap.  Using the palm of your hand gently push a portion of the dough away from you.  This flattens out the butter lumps into sheaths and incorporates the butter and flour evenly. This creates a flaky, tender crust.  This is called fraisage ‘(yep, more French lingo) Repeat until you have pushed all of the dough.  Gather it into a ball, flatten into a disc and place it in the fridge to rest for approximately 30 minutes.

How Easy is That?!

As the dough chills start on your peaches.  We adapted Smitten Kitchen’s recipe for Bourbon Peach hand pies for the filling.  We added a bit of brown sugar and a pinch of salt. Omit the cinnamon if you like.  Although delicious the hand pies have less filling and would have benefitted from a flavor boost.  I think I would add a bit of peach jam to the fresh peaches to try to intensify the flavor next time.  We had quite a bit of filling left and Jamie BRILLIANTLY (shameless parent plug) grabbed some ramekins and made peach crisps with the extra.  YUM!

Back to the pie crust dough…

On a lightly floured board or surface, pat your dough into a rectangle.  Divide in half and roll each piece into a 7×11 rectangle, approximately 1/8 inch thick.  You may need to trim the edges to make a pretty rectangle.  Divide the dough into 4 pieces 7x 2.75”.
Hint– Roll it out on parchment paper on a flat cookie sheet, makes it easy to transfer to the fridge.  Once you have cut it into four pieces chill for 30 minutes.  While it is chilling, roll out 2nd disc of dough.
Hint-Use a ruler and a pizza cutter to cut out your rectangles.
Or if you like use a 4.5” round cookie cutter for half-moon-shaped pies.

Pearls of Pie-Making Wisdom

If at any time the dough gets too soft, throw it back in the fridge to chill.
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Peche a Trois’ (Peach Hand Pies, Crisp, Unadulterated)

Really, does this need an intro? Handpies of buttery, flakey crust filled with summer sweet peaches
Course Dessert, Pie
Cuisine American
Keyword Peach handpies
Prep Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes

Ingredients

Peach Hand Pies

Pie or Galette Crust from Julia Childs

  • 2 cups AP flour
  • 7 ounces cold unsalted butter cut into 1/2 pieces
  • 1 tablespoon cold shortening or lard cut into 1/2 inch pieces
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp sugar
  • 1/3 cup ice cold water reserve 1 tablespoon to finish dough

Filling

  • 2 pounds fresh peaches
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar + 1 T light brown sugar
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 teaspoon bourbon
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 tsp cinnamon omit if you like
  • One egg yolk beaten with 2 tablespoons water for egg wash or cream
  • Coarse sanding sugar for decoration

Instructions

See above for directions for making pie dough!

    Filling

    • Make the filling. Peel and dice peaches into 1/2 inch pieces. Add remaining ingredients, mix gently and set aside. If you wish, add 1-2 tablespoons peach preserves.
    • Remove chilled dough from fridge, let stand a couple of minutes until pliable. Spoon 1.5 tablespoons filling onto one half of each rectangle or circle of dough. Brush a little water on the edge and fold in half. Seal and crimp edge with a fork. Repeat with remaining dough. Transfer to fridge and chill for 30 minutes. We used cream on our pies and sprinkled some sugar on top, you could use an egg wash if you like.
    • You can make these hand pies bigger or smaller as you want. The key is to keep the dough’s thickness at approximately 1/8 inch.
    • Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Remove pies from fridge and place on parchment lined baking sheet. Cut a small slit in each pie and brush with wash. Sprinkle with sugar and place in oven to bake.
    • Bake approximately 20 minutes until edges are golden brown. Remove and let cool slightly before serving.

    Peach Crisp

    • We had quite a bit of peach filling left so we made crisp using our apple crisp crumble topping recipe. So this is probably more crumble then you will need. Cut the recipe in half if you want. Fill lightly buttered ramekins with extra peach filling. Sprinkle crumble on top and bake at 350 degrees for 15-20 minutes until crisp bubbles and top is golden brown.

    Crumble topping

      Mix topping ingredients, except for oats and nuts, with pastry blender or fingers until crumbly.

      • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
      • 1/2 cup brown sugar
      • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
      • 3/4 cup all purpose flour
      • 1 stick of unsalted butter, softened
      • 1/4 teaspoon salt

      Add oatmeal and nuts and stir to combine

      • 1/2 cup old fashioned oatmeal (not instant or quick cook)
      • Add 1/2 cup chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)
      • Take excess filling and spoon into selected-size buttered ramekins. I like 3/4-1 cup ramekins. Top with crumble.

      Finishing the Crisp

        And to complete our trio....

        • Fresh ripe peaches, sliced, leave them whole, your choice. Take a bite, let the juice drip down your chin, hand or both. Yum!