Tu Voila! 

August 20, 2024.

by Bridget O’Donnell


In 2023 while renewing our CSA vegetable share, I added-on a 10-week berry share without hesitating. Since the 2024 berry share started we’ve eaten berries every day, sometimes more than once a day, we also shared a few quarts and still had plenty left to freeze. (Thank you Greig Farm!!)

In addition to strawberries, raspberries, blackberries and peaches, a few consecutive weeks also included 2 quarts of blueberries. So awesome! But, once our carefully curated collection started falling out of the freezer every time the door was opened, it was time to make more than a few intermittent protein smoothies. In an attempt to see myself as being successful I told anyone who would listen, “I AM going to make blueberry muffins before the berry share ends.”

Throughout the penultimate week of the berry share I looked for recipes containing and/or omitting a few ingredients and finally settled on “Healthy Blueberry Muffins“ by Lisa Longley. To create a lower-glycemic and more nutrient dense breakfast or, fuel before a longer jog I borrowed ingredients from the “Superhero Smash Muffin” recipe in Rise & Run (pg. 100). Even with blueberries, I think the original recipe was intended to be more savory than sweet. Unfortunately, when I doubled Longley’s recipe I forgot to double the honey so they were even more so, making each bite with blueberry that much…MORE. Thankfully, my mistake could easily be remedied with spreadable honey, jam or jelly. Overall, the muffins were palatable and provided hours of sustenance but, I'm going to change a few things in the next batch. Langley's recipe calls for [olive] oil which I usually substitute with unsweetened applesauce in baked goods. Next time I’ll omit the oil and add some banana to give them a subtle sweetness and add moisture. 

Ultimately, I achieved my goal (👍🏻) but we still had enough berries in the freezer to fill a bucket so I tried a recipe that I would never have thought of on my own…


Title of cookbook/website: Epicurious.com

 

Author of Recipe: Anna Stockwell and Emily Saladino

 

What prompted you to check out this recipe?

In between patiently listening to me repeat the mantra to make blueberry muffins Lauren C., another CSA member, suggested that I try Clafoutis. She said it looks really impressive at a dinner party and isn’t difficult to make; the New York Times has a good recipe. After a little research, this became the inspiration for this month’s What's Cooking Blog review.

 

What did you like about this recipe? 

Clafoutis (kla - fou - ti) is a French dish traditionally made with cherries. Over time it has evolved so “almost any fruit can be used.” It can be sweet or a little more savory depending on the amount of sugar added or the type of fruit used. It’s versatile, served for dessert or brunch either at room temperature or cold (so leftovers can be refrigerated).

 

What didn’t you like about this recipe?

This recipe isn’t vegan or gluten-free so I can’t share it with people who observe those dietary guidelines. The recipe would also be challenging to reduce, let’s say in half, because it calls for three eggs.

 

Favorite recipes (that you tried from the cookbook/website):

Any-Fruit Clafoutis

 

Did you alter the recipe or make any substitutions?

After reading through a healthy portion of the Notes at the bottom of the NYTimes recipe and comparing other ‘classic’ recipes to the one by Epicurious.com I decided to try the following modifications.

 

     Ingredients that I used:

Butter

Whole milk

Eggs

[⅓ cup] Granulated cane sugar

All purpose + almond flours

Lemon zest

Fine sea salt

Frozen berries (black-, blue- and, rasp-berries)

Ground ginger

whisky

 

     Modifications:

 

  • Combine ¾ cup all-purpose flour with ¼ cup fine almond flour (for added texture).

  • Prepare the fruit with a portion of the sugar.

  • [After mixing the dry ingredients, including the remaining sugar with a fork because I don’t own a sifter] Add the dry ingredients to a blender containing the frothy mixture a little at a time to avoid clumping. 

  • Add 1 teaspoons of ginger powder and a splash of whisky to the blender (optional or, add more to taste).

  • To grease the baking dish, add approximately 2 tablespoons of butter to a cast iron skillet. Preheat the oven to 350˚F and place the skillet in for 6 minutes until the butter has melted. 

  • Following Nik Sharma’s recipe on NYTimes.com from step 4 on, I poured a ½ inch layer of the batter [without fruit] in the skillet and baked it for 15 minutes. Then, I arranged 3 cups of prepared fruit in the bottom of the skillet, poured the remaining batter over top and baked it.

  • Begin to check for doneness around 45-50 minutes, rather than 60-65 minutes as instructed. One note suggested that Clafoutis should be slightly browning, not golden brown. 

Tu Voila!

 

  • Before serving lightly dust confectioner’s sugar over the top (pictured below). We tried ours with a small spoon of cottage cheese on one side of the plate and a small spoon of vanilla ice cream on the other side for taste testing. The ice cream was the winning accompagnement. (All suggestions in this bullet are optional.)

Would you recommend this recipe?

Yes, I shared the entire skillet (with vanilla ice cream). There were no complaints. We might say it was berry good! Honestly, I can’t believe it actually worked!!

Any-Fruit Clafoutis 

(with black-, blue- and rasp-berries)

Healthy Blueberry Muffin 

(with Spreadable Honey)

 

References:

Books - 

The Everything Low-Cholesterol Cookbook / Laura Livesey. (Blueberry Almond Muffins, pg. 238 - I was interested in making this but didn't have all the ingredients. Livesey notes that ‘dark berries have up to 50% more antioxidants than lighter colored berries. This includes black-, blue-, cran-, elder- and, boysenberries.’)

 

Rise & Run: Recipes, Rituals, and Runs to Fuel Your Day / Shalane Flanagan & Elyse Kopecky. (Superhero Smash Muffins, pg. 100 - I borrowed the idea of mixing oat and almond flours and, adding ground flax.)

 

Websites -

Bellis, Mary. The History of the Refrigerator - and Freezer, theinventors.org/library/inventors/blrefrigerator.htm. Accessed 15 August 2024.

 

Longley, Lisa. “Healthy Blueberry Muffins.” Simple Joy, 29 May 2024, www.simplejoy.com/healthy-blueberry-muffins/.

 

Miquel, Julien. “How to Pronounce Clafoutis? (CORRECTLY).” Youtube, 1 July 2020,  

www.google.com/search?q=how+to+pronounce+clafoutis&rlz=1C1CHMO_enUS673US674&oq=how+to+pronounce+clafoutis&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOdIBCDU4MDZqMGoxqAIAsAIA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:a49dce47,vid:iiaqzbnMDls,st:0. Accessed 15 August 2024. -  (00:52 minute video)

 

“Poughkeepsie Farm Project Online Store.” PFP Farm Store, pfpfarmstore.com/. Accessed 15 August 2024.

 

Saladino, Emily, and Anna Stockwell. “How to Make Clafoutis, with (Almost) Any Kind of Fruit.” Epicurious, 21 May 2024, www.epicurious.com/expert-advice/how-to-make-clafoutis-with-any-kind-of-fruit-article.

 

Sharma, Nik. “Blueberry-Ginger Clafoutis.” The New York Times, 13 May 2021, cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1022224-blueberry-ginger-clafoutis. - (You will need a subscription to see this recipe.)

 

Shulman, Martha Rose. “Berry Clafoutis.” The New York Times, 20 May 2014, cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1016382-berry-clafoutis.

 

“Welcome to the Greig Farm: Pick Your Own.” Greig Farm, www.thegreigfarm.com/. Accessed 15 August 2024.

 

Quick Subject/Concept links to the Discover Online Library catalog:

Cooking (Berries)  - (Results narrowed by Age group: Adult ; Literary Form: Non-Fiction)

Berries. - (Results narrowed by Age group: Adult ; Literary Form: Non-Fiction ; Concepts/Subjects/Themes: Desserts, Cooking (Natural foods), Baking, Gardening, Fruit, Berries, Health, Container gardening, Nutrition, Smoothies (Beverages), Fruit-culture)