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Let’s Get Ready to (Apple/Pear) Crumble

January 7, 2015 By Lauren

I like baking, but baking doesn’t always like me.  Soups like me, braised meats love me, roasted veggies and I would probably be engaged if I wasn’t already taken, but I just feel like breads and pastries don’t really get me.  The me that prefers dashes and pinches to quantifiable units of measurement.  The me that hasn’t faithfully followed a recipe since 2008.  The me that is too laid-back (read: lazy) to ensure that I am adding exactly 1 and 1/4 cups of flour, to knead for exactly 15 (15!) minutes, to bake for no more and no less than 45 minutes at exactly 375 degrees F without opening the oven ever, not even once, just to check.

That’s not to say that baking and I haven’t had our moments.  There were those two pumpkins pies for Thanksgiving in Oakland, that spelt chocolate birthday cake with raw-milk whipped-cream, those cardamom buns made outside of Stockholm (with a lot of help from a Swede).

Oh, and there have always been crumbles.  That cherry crumble with Kasia and Annabel last July, the first blueberry crumble I ever made many Augusts ago in Maine, and this apple and pear crumble I’ve been making almost every couple of weeks this season.

crumblin

crumbs

Crumble gets me.  In fact, I think it’s safe to say, crumble gets all of us.  Unlike its other baked counterparts (I’m looking at you, pie), crumble is as unfussy, as forgiving as the most simple desserts–fresh strawberries and cream, raw-milk-yogurt and honey–and as satisfying.  All you need are rolled oats, some butter, something sweet (honey, sugar, maple syrup), whatever fruit you have on hand, and an oven.  You don’t even really need a plate.

fauxbaker

Gleaning from Gleaning

A few weeks ago, while on a walk a bit outside of Geneva, L & I came across an apple field.  The apple season had ended–the farmers had finished picking weeks ago–, but, still, many red and green delights hung from the branches.  In Switzerland, as in much of Europe, there is a tradition of gleaning (See: Agnes Varda’s film Les glaneurs et la glaneuse, or this painting by Jean Francois Millet.), or free-range for all peoples on the odds & ends of a harvest.  Historically, gleaning belonged to the peasant class, and was protected as their right to collect what was unwanted.  A lot has changed since peasant-times, but gleaning remains a protected practice for those still wanting to make use of the unwanted, the “waste”.  Those with a limited budget and a bit of free time.  Those wishing to connect to the source of their food.  And for those crumble-lovers on a Sunday stroll.

There are communities of dedicated gleaners here, folks who know the window for gleaning each local crop.  I met one particularly spirited gleaner, or shall I say glaneuse, at our neighborhood farmer’s market.  In her late 70s and towering over a card-table with few contents–a couple bags of dried herbs, five jam jars of various sizes and hues, a half-empty (half-full?) paper bag of some sad-looking quinces–this glaneuse, let’s call her Diana (Diana wants nothing to do with the internet, preferring to remain fully in the corporeal world), had produced all her table’s contents through gleaning.  In fact, you could even say that she gleaned her place into the farmer’s market, an unofficial vendor of earthly delights who often disappears in the blink of an eye, or at the sight of the market patrol.

I had hopes to meet with Diana to find out more about her life, to learn the secret of her seabuckthorn jam, but the day we were supposed to meet (at an undisclosed location where she would build a fire for roasting chestnuts, if we brought the chestnuts) was too windy for fires and, well, for her, that was that.

I think the real reason baking and I don’t jive is because I’m often seeking immediate results, instant gratification.  Mind you, this gratification is usually something like learning the best place to forage for Linden leaves, or being able to knit the perfect pair of socks on my first attempt, but it’s still the same emphasis on results, on future good as opposed to present process.  I’m new to Switzerland, and it’s okay for me to get to know this place bit by bit, bird by bird, one gleaned apple, like one loaf of bread, one kind of pie, at a time.

apple

crust

Print
Apple Pear Crumble

You don't really need to measure anything here. Crumble is one of those things, like pancakes, that once you get down the basic ratio, it's okay to eye it. If I have less butter, I use less butter. If I don't have butter, I use ghee. Experiment! And post your findings here.

Ingredients

  • Around 100grams or 1 stick of grass-fed butter, room temperature
  • Around 1/2 cup of Rapadura sugar
  • Around 1 cup rolled oats
  • Pinch salt
  • Two handfuls of small, tart apples, sliced thinly
  • Two sweet & soft pears, like Comice, sliced thinly

Directions

  1. Heat oven to 350F. Mix butter and sugar together in a bowl and cream with a fork. This usually takes a few minutes. Add rolled oats and salt and mix well.
  2. Line a pie plate, a cast-iron skillet, or a big sheet of tinfoil with the apples and pears, layering them alternately (one layer of apples, one of pears). The pears should be far juicer than the apples and will give them some moisture. You could grate some cinnamon over the fruit, or squeeze a bit of lemon, or add nothing at all.
  3. Pour crumble mixture on top of fruits. Bake for 45 minutes, until crumble is golden brown.

Crumble will keep for 4 days if sealed.

3.1

 

baked

Any other gleaners out there?

Filed Under: Desserts, Fruit, Recipes, Winter Tagged With: apples, baking, crumble, desserts, pears, winter

50-Minute Barszcz

December 10, 2014 By Lauren

beet-3

During these dark winter months, Geneva becomes land-of-the-dinner-party.  When the cold wind blows, when the sun straight up disappears, when night falls just before five o’clock, there’s no better way to see your friends than in your home, gathered around your table, tucking into something warm.  Just last week, we were hosts on Thursday, guests on Friday and guests on Saturday.  Phew.  And while I sincerely adore the new friends I’m meeting here, sometimes, and especially during these more reflective months, I can’t help but miss the old ones.

Like Kasia, who lives in Vancouver.  Kasia and I only met last year, but as we share a sign in the Chinese Zodiac (rabbit, in case you were wondering), were both born on the 28th (of different months, but that’s besides the point), and are both prone to a vata imbalance (the tell-tale sign being chapped lips [and too many parenthetical asides]), it’s safe to say that we’ve known each other a long, long time, karmically speaking. We met at school for holistic nutrition and it was love at first  alternately serious and silly conversation.  Much of the time we spent together was like one long dinner party for two (or three, or four, or six) where nourishing food and avant-garde dance moves were never-ending.

One grey winter day, we made a barszcz, which is a beet-soup for those of you who don’t speak Polish (everyone, except Polish people and Lu who learned it for fun).  I’d been making barszcz a lot that winter, as beets are one of my favorite vegetables and soup is my favorite food, but had yet to prepare it with Kasia, who hails from Poland and grew up on rye bread, liver pate and, of course, beets in all forms, including soup.

Kasia’s version of barszcz is her mother’s, only half-blended and served with a whooping spoonful of mashed potatoes.  As I prepare a barszcz for myself on this grey, winter day, I’m transported to that evening–beet-chopping, potato-mashing, faux-philosophizing, interpretative-dancing–and feel nourished not only by fibrous, nutrient-rich beet, but by friendship, old friendship, soul friendship which is a maybe one of the most precious nutrients of all.

The Bountiful Beet

Beets are chock-full of vitamins and minerals–folate for nervous system support , manganese for protein digestion and utilization, potassium for blood pressure regulation, copper for tissue healing and bone formation, magnesium for heart-health, vitamin C for immune system support, iron for hemoglobin production–and loads of fiber.  But, their nutritional value doesn’t stop there.  The beet does, in fact, go on as the pigments that give beets their robust colors–from raspberry-striped to plum-jam to golden-ochre–are actually antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds called betalains, which have also been shown to support our liver’s detoxification process.  A nourishing choice for the, sometimes overindulgent, holiday season, indeed!

Betalains are sensitive and can be destroyed by prolonged heat.  This is why I suggest making a 50-minute barszcz, where the beets are cooked for only 30-minutes or so in order to preserve these super-powers.

chiogga

Print
50-Minute Barszcz

Ingredients

  • knob ghee
  • 1 medium yellow onion, diced
  • 1 leek, diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 carrots, diced
  • 1/4 of a small savoy cabbage, grated or sliced thinly
  • 4 small-medium beets, or 2 large ones, diced
  • a teaspoon of black peppercorns, whole
  • 1/2 teaspoon of coriander seeds, whole
  • 2 sprigs dill, fresh
  • 1 liter broth; chicken, beef, or vegetable
  • a few pinches of salt

Directions

  1. Heat ghee in soup pot on medium heat. Once hot, add onion, good pinch of salt and let cook until translucent. Stir in leek and garlic and let cook for a few more minutes. Add carrots and cabbage, another good pinch of salt, and stir the pot so everything is distributed evenly. Turn heat down to low and let cook five minutes, stirring every so often.
  2. While you're waiting, wrap the peppercorns, coriander and dill in a cheesecloth and fasten. This will be your spice-sack.
  3. Add beets to the pot, and let cook for a few minutes before adding your broth. Add your broth and your spice sack, bring pot to a boil, cover, turn heat down to low and let simmer for 30 minutes.

You can either fully blend your barszcz like I did, or you can blend half of it, or none at all.

Enjoy with a side of fermented veggies, raw-milk sour-cream or a soft-boiled egg or a spoonful of mashed potatoes and a hunk of sourdough bread.

3.1

Filed Under: Dinner, Lunch, Recipes, Vegetable, Winter Tagged With: beets, bonebroth, dinner, lunch, soup, winter

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