The Berry Bible
by Janie Hilber
William Morrow 2004
This may be the best single-subject cookbook I own. Not only
does it have delicious, reliable, and inventive recipes, it also offers
comprehensive information on 41 types of berries, including history of
cultivation, culinary uses, picking and storing information and a color
supplement of identification photos.
Hilber explores so many types of berries it can be torture
to read this book in winter. I highly recommend perusing it in early summer; it
will help you plan your summer. And maybe your vacation. And what you will grow
in your garden.
Even though I have loved this book since I got it (one of my
rare full-priced brand-new purchases) I forget how much good stuff is in it. I just
noticed her handy table that converts
ounces to cups of berries and a table of puree yields for different types of
berries.
I thought I knew my berries, but it turns out I, and most
likely you Dear Reader, are woefully ignorant of the bounty that is out there.
Here are just some I have never heard of: arbutus, buffalo berry, jostaberry,
ohelo berry, and salal. Others I have only read about, such as cloud berries
and salmon berries, as they are both highly regional and highly perishable.
Interspersed through the text are sidebars on Native
American ways with berries, quotes on berries from literature and history, as
well as remembrances from foragers, cooks, and eaters.
Beautiful and delicious |
In short, this book makes me happy. And the recipes are
excellent. They include drinks, salads, soups and entrees as well as the
expected baked goods, desserts, and preserves. Her Raspberry Buttermilk Muffins
are my standard now. They have excellent balance between sweet and tart.
Things I want to try this summer: Staghorn Sumac Lemonade (I
haven't had this since summer camp), Black Currant Conserve, Boysenberry Honey,
and Boccone Dolce (chocolate coated meringue disks topped with whipped cream
and strawberries).
I may try her Perfect
Strawberry Shortcake. I am sure it is good. It calls for a scratch baked biscuit,
strawberries, sugar and cream. Nothing weird nor any attempt to gussy up what
is, when done right, perfection. But I am wedded to my own version, which is my
mother's, which was her mother's version.
It too is made with a biscuit. While strawberry shortcake
does have the word cake in its title it MUST be made with a biscuit.
Strawberries on cake with cream is also a lovely dessert but it is not the same
thing. And those of you who have only had strawberry shortcake using those
pre-packaged spongy rounds from the grocery store, well…I just feel sorry for
you.
Strawberry Shortcake for a day in June
biscuits
strawberries
sugar
whipping cream
confectioner's sugar
While it is still cool in the morning make your biscuits.
Unless it is very humid; they won't hold well, so make them later. You do this
early so that the kitchen will be cool when you eat this for supper. Yes
supper. It is wonderful as a dessert, but for a pure summer moment, have
shortcake for dinner.
I use Christopher Kimball's' recipe from the Yellow
Farmhouse Kitchen cookbook. I like the texture--short but not too crumbly and
the addition of vanilla rounds out the flavor. One recipe will serve 4 for
dessert, and 2 for supper.
You, of course, may use whatever biscuit recipe is your
favorite. Even Bisquick or Jiffy Mix works, though both are saltier than a
homemade biscuit. You'll have to adjust the sugar accordingly. You want to make
drop biscuits; their rough texture and browned bits is more appealing for this
than a rolled biscuit.
While the biscuits bake, or at least an hour (two is better)
before serving, slice the strawberries. You need a good pound, pound and a half
for 4 people. Better to be too generous than skimpy. And you can always have
any leftovers for breakfast.
Hull and slice the berries into a bowl. Add sugar. This is
where it gets tricky. I admit I do this by eye and by taste. It is slightly
different each time, because berries vary so much. I start with a quarter
cup--it may take up to ½ a cup. Put in a smaller amount first and let the
berries macerate until they release their juices, 30 minutes or so. Mash about
half the berries in the bowl--you don't need to separate or measure out half.
Just press down with a potato masher, or if you are among the fortunate, your
grandmother's strawberry masher. Let sit another 30 minutes or so until you
have a beautiful jewel-like blend of syrup and strawberries.
When it is time to eat, whip a cup of heavy cream until soft
peaks form. Add a smidge of confectioner's sugar--1-2 Tbs for the whole batch.
You want the rich cream to contrast with the sweetness of the berries, not
override them.
Do not add liquor to the berries or the cream. Do not try
using fancy turbinado or maple sugar for the white sugar with the berries. You
think it will enhance; it doesn't; it just muddles the berry flavor. I know,
because I have tried. Herbage in the cream or the berries can be nice--but then
it becomes something other than strawberry shortcake.
Split the biscuits, place half in a bowl, generously cover
with strawberries and syrup. Splodge a lot or a little of the whipped cream,
per your constitution. Top with the other half of the biscuit. Try to squish it
down into the berry mixture a bit so it, too, can soak up some of the juices.
Serve with any extra berry mixture and cream. This way you can adjust for the
proper ratio as you eat. Ponder the fleeting nature of summer as you eat with
joy.
If there are leftovers (and if you are canny you will
squirrel away some extras from your guests; any amount put on the table tends
to get eaten) this makes a sublime breakfast.
So, breakfast, dinner, and dessert. Have you ever had shortcake three times in one day? When are you making the next batch?
ReplyDeleteI am quite curious about the Sumac lemonade. And love the listing of esoteric berry names, followed by the two page berry spread.
ReplyDelete