• 03Aug

    pieblueberry.jpg For those of you who don’t know me, I’m a control freak. I do need to do things MY way. This ends up being true with recipes. I change them to fit my quirks and idiosyncrasies all the time.
    So one night, some of J’s co-workers are coming over for dinner. They are bringing a fabulous salad and we’ll be tossing some homemade pesto (that I made and froze) with some pasta. Salad and entrée done. I simply cannot have a dinner party (such that it is) without dessert.
    I look for a cobbler recipe since they are fairly easy to assemble. Being the control freak I am, I don’t want just any old cobbler, I want the cakey kind. There are two kinds of cobbler, the biscuit kind that has what is essentially a scone dough floating on top of the fruit, and the cakey kind where the cakelike batter oozes down into the fruit and marries it into a fruit cakey mess of goodness. I find the following recipe on Epicurious.
    For filling
    1 stick butter
    1 teaspoon lemon juice
    4 cups fresh blueberries, rinsed and drained
    1 cup sugar

    For topping
    1 cup self-rising flour
    1 cup sugar
    1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring
    1/2 cup of milk
    Accompaniment: Fresh whipped cream or vanilla ice cream

    To prepare the filling:
    Preheat oven to 375°F. Place the butter in an 8 x 8-inch square glass baking dish (no substitutes), and melt the butter in the microwave. In a mixing bowl, combine lemon juice and blueberries. Add the sugar and mix well. Add the blueberry mixture to the baking dish with the melted butter. Do not stir.
    Make topping:
    Combine all of the topping ingredients in a small bowl. Pour this mixture over the blueberries and bake 45 minutes, or until brown. This recipe is also good for apples, blackberries, and peaches.
    A STICK of butter? A CUP of sugar in the fruit? The poor fruit will be doing the backstroke in a pool of sugary butter? I promptly cut the amount of butter and sugar in the fruit by half and cut the sugar in the topping by a third. Along with the lemon juice in the filling, I add a dash of REAL vanilla. I also add a half a teaspoon of cinnamon in the topping batter for added flavor.
    I crossed my fingers about this because I changed the recipe fairly radically. It turned out wonderfully. Tasting a piece of the topping without the fruit, I actually thought I could have cut the amount of sugar in half, not just by a third. While it’s not always advisable to play with recipes when it comes to baking, my control freak mind can’t help but tinker with a recipe.

2 Responses

  • This recipe is a puzzler. I make cobblers and crisps (with an oatmeal/flour mix in the topping to make it crunchy) alot and my filling is usually: 5 C berries, 4 TB cornstarch and 1 cup sugar – a bit of cinammon (1/4 tsp) and lemon juice (1 TB) maybe a grating or so of lemon zest. Just mix. I don’t know why there’s ANY butter in their filling at all? And an entire stick!! I do use butter for my topping tho.

  • I think the idea behind the butter is that the batter would seep down and the butter would bubble up and that would create a moister and richer crust. Since you are essentially making a cake batter, the butter replaces the missing egg to provide the fat that gives cake their richness. There’s obviously the biscuit route for cobbler that entails making a biscuit doough out of cut butter, flour, and milk. This recipe saves that step.

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