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Recipe of the Week – Cherry Clafoutis

 

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Apologies for the light posting of late – the Minx is only doing morning camp this week, so I don’t have so much free time. The good news is that the interminable summer holidays are coming to an end in less than two weeks, may the Lord and all the angels be praised. Call me a bad mother but I am counting the seconds. America, is ELEVEN weeks of summer vacation REALLY necessary?

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But I digress.

For a brief moment at the end of the cherry season in the UK, the market in Portobello Road was full of deep, dark, rich, ridiculously expensive cherries, the colour of the very best red wine, marked ‘USA”. I used to look forward to those cherries all year.

Little did I know then that the chances were that those cherries came from Washington state and that I would one day be living in a place where the farmers’ markets would be heaving with them. Apparently it’s something to do with the climate and the volcanic soil, but they truly are the best cherries I’ve ever tasted.

Last week was pretty much the end of this year’s Washington cherry season, so I seized the opportunity to make a clafoutis. I first ate (an awful lot of) clafoutis in the South of France when I was teaching there as part of my university degree and every year since then I’ve made it religiously when cherry season comes around.

The recipe I’ve found which seems to me to be the most authentic comes from my ancient battered copy of Paula Wolfert’s the Cooking of South West France which has apparently been recently reissued.

I’ve doubled the quantities she gives to make enough to fit my 34 cm x 20 cm ( 13ins x 8ins). You don’t need to get too precious about the quantities – you just need enough batter to almost cover the cherries.

Ingredients

- Enough cherries to completely cover the bottom of your dish. Many people in France don’t stone their cherries which makes it much easier to prepare but a bit of a pain to eat. I stone my cherries if I’m feeling posh. You could also use apricots or pears – any fruit that doesn’t get too soft in cooking.

- Enough butter to grease your dish

- 5 tbsps plain/all-purpose flour

- 1/2 tsp salt

- 4 tbps granulated sugar

- 5 large eggs

16 fl oz /500 ml/ 2 cups single cream or half and half or creamy milk or a mixture of milk and heavy/double cream, depending on how decadent/slim you’re feeling

- 1 1/2 tsps vanilla extract

- 2 tbsps dark rum, kirsch, Armagnac (optional, I prefer it without)

- enough granulated sugar to dredge thickly when cooked

 

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Method

- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F/180degrees C/Gas Mark 4

- Remove stems and pit fruit if necessary, if using apricots or larger fruits instead of cherries, slice them in half.

- Slather your dish with butter and add the fruit in a single layer

- In a mixing bowl combine the dry ingredients.

- Warm the milk or cream until barely simmering

- Whisk the eggs into the cream

- Whisk in the dry ingredients mixture until well-blended.

- Add the vanilla and rum etc. if using.

- Strain the batter over the fruit (very often I can’t be bothered to strain it).

- Bake for 40 minutes or until firm and golden

 

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Before                                                                                      After          
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During – oh clafoutis you gorgeous golden hunk of love

 

- When it’s cooked, take it out of the oven and dredge thickly with granulated sugar while still warm. Serve either lukewarm or cold.

The best accompaniment to this is the sort of extra-thick spoonable double cream that you can buy in the UK and which is unheard of in the US (which I have verifired via a heated Facebook and Twitter discussion). If you can’t get thick spoonable cream, then creme fraiche would do at a pinch or just pourable heavy cream. Or else, it’s really so delicious that you don’t need any cream at all.

 

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Comments

K

Oooh, I made apricot clafoutis today! Delish! Your baking pan is much nicer than mine, though.

davina

looks gorgeous and tasty..can you post some over to me P..thanks

Elizabeth Mackey

Great looking clafoutis! I've always heard that the reason for leaving the pit in was that when cooked, it imparts an almond flavor. The ones I have eaten in France do have all the pits, but they are the "pits" to eat that way for sure!

Gypsy

I know exactly what you mean! Now that I live in the land of cherries, I feel like it is a moral imperative to make clafoutis all season long! I even started making them two at a time :)

Scroll down at this link for my homely photo, if you want to feel really (justifiably) great about all the time and effort you put into your beautiful food photography!

http://martinseke.blogspot.com/2010/07/sometimes-we-just-stay-home.html

Paola


K. I'm going to have to try apricot clafoutis next I think (I've never made it).

EM. Yes, I'd heard that reason for leaving the pits in, but I have to say I've never been able to taste the difference myself (and yes, definitely 'the pits'!)

Gypsy. Yours look FABULOUS. And I love the picture of your boys in the pool at the top of the post.

stella

oh my God, love your blog! :)

Seattle Chiropractic

That looks sooooo good!

I Love Cherries!

I wish I could bake like that... My Grandma could bake some mean cinnamon rolls... but this just looks Devine!

Maybe I'll pass this recipe off to my sister and see if she will give it a try to my benefit! ;-)

Yum....

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