Find the recipe here: http://www.publicradio.org/columns/prairiehome/sundberg/2012/07/09.shtml
Well, it took a few stops to find whole wheat pastry flour, but Whole Foods® has never let me down. That store is wicked. So seductive in the way it's laid out, the smells that greet you when you walk in the door. And the array of samples that tempt you to cram your list into your pocket, and shop by the seat of your pants. I got out of there for under $50, and I consider that trip a success!
In the discussion of how this dessert got its name, I asked Mrs. Sundberg why it was called a 'buckle'. Her reply: "I did a bit of research once on Bettys, buckles, crumbles, pandowdies and slumps. Seems 'buckle' describes what the streusel-like topping looks as if its doing: buckling. Seriously." She also added: " 'Grunt' is one of my favorites. It's a dumpling-like pudding made on top of the stove, generally using local fruits. The name came from the east coast states and is the sound that the berries make as they cook."
She does her homework and knows more about food than just cooking it. There's a little history involved, and I like that. I've noticed that recipe names sometimes express the literal, along with quaint, regional names that reflect the maker, or the area from which it originates. Sort of a glimpse back in time. Simpler, less hectic, although it probably felt as frantic then as it does now, to the people who were living it.
Anyway, this recipe calls for fresh raspberries and blueberries, mine came from California, via Whole Foods®. I would like to say that I went into rural Virginia and picked them myself, but the outdoors and I don't always get along, plus being 20 miles from D.C., I would probably have to drive a while. The good news is that raspberries are full of good-for-you things like B vitamins, vitamin K, fiber and minerals, while blueberries are among the highest anti-oxidant fruits, with soluble dietary fiber, and many vitamins and minerals as well. Raspberries have European roots while blueberries are native to North America. I didn't know that.
We experimented with making our own vanilla a few years ago. We got a small bottle of vodka, split 3 vanilla beans, scraped the seeds out, and put them and the pods in the bottle. This one has been perking for almost 4 years, and it is SO good. It's almost time to buy more vodka.
My Mr. wanted vanilla ice cream to go with this, so I made a go-to recipe that is EASY.
2 cups heavy whipping cream
14 oz. sweetened condensed milk
Whatever flavors you want, added to the milk
(This batch was 1 TBS vanilla, 1/2 vanilla bean, seeds scraped out and added to the milk)
Whip the cream until fairly stiff peaks form, fold in the milk mixture, and place in a lidded container and freeze 4-6 hours. That's it. I have also made Lime ice cream, adding the juice of 4 limes and 2 TBS of zest, and Coffee ice cream, adding 4 shots of espresso and some ground up coffee beans. Even I couldn't mess this one up. This ice cream is the 'one scoop, every once in a while' kind. It's a heavy, creamy kind that will satisfy without overdoing it. The Lime was good sandwiched between two ginger cookies and frozen, and the Coffee was good between two Dutch cocoa cookies.
I like the fact that this recipe used fresh, seasonal fruit. I had frozen blueberries, but my goal is to follow Mrs. Sundberg's recipe to the letter. I have a bad habit of flinging other things into recipes, and if it isn't as good as I'd like, I have to figure out where I went wrong, so no straying from the original here. If someone's going to mess it up, it won't be me!
So now there is a hole in the middle of the dessert, and a fork laying on the counter. My Mr. decided to take a bite. He pronounced it delicious. We both had a helping with the ice cream, and it was wonderful. The berries held their shape, they were bright and flavorful, and that hint of nutmeg was excellent!
BUCKLE. Oh it buckled alright. Like hot Georgia asphalt. Thank you, Mrs. Sundberg. :-)
3 comments:
fun-you know you're gonna have to do rhubarb soon...
Oh gosh! I did a Google search for "Mrs. Sundberg" and never expected to find this! I love reading that you're making her recipes... she is a voice of peace and love and softness in a time when it's all "hooray for our side" and nothing of human interest.
Thank you for this.
anita-margarita, thank you SO much for the kind words! She is such a peach, and I adore her, for as much as I can, having never met her in person. But we have communicated, and she was very surprised that I wanted to do this blog. It was an idea that made sense to me, and I am having the best time doing this. Plus, good things are being made, and my husband and his two work mates are getting to taste test everything. They LOVE that part!
Mrs. Sundberg is on Facebook, so if you're on it, you can 'like' her page. She comments regularly, and interacts with us all. Plus the links that I post in each blog entry for the recipe take you to the Prairie Home Companion page where her weekly article is. If you have time, I highly recommend it...it's great reading!
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