There has been a big push over the past couple years to shop
and cook seasonally and locally. As I’ve read numerous articles on the subject,
browsed restaurant menus littered with names of local creameries and farms, and
planned at home menus revolving around root vegetables and baby greens
depending on the date, I’ve come to two conclusions:
1. Shopping
and cooking locally is pricey.
2. Shopping
and cooking seasonally is easier, and not so pricey.
Farmer’s markets are the classic, no-brainer outlet for
local shopping. They are an excellent
opportunity for local producers to display and sell their wares without a brick
and mortar establishment that they likely could not afford/nor have any
interest in. Farmer’s markets are also about community--- local shoppers
browsing local goods, supporting one another. Who doesn’t feel good helping a
neighbor out? I mean, even if I can’t
digitally touch an Amish farmer from Lancaster County via Facebook friendship,
I might as well extend a helping hand buy paying $20/lb for their goat milk
cheddar.
Farmer's Market in Lyon with my bestie, J. |
Don’t get me wrong, I love a good farmer’s market, but I’ve
decided I’d much rather turn my consumer focus to driving my menus around
seasonal goods, in any venue. It’s
simple economics. When a fruit or vegetable is in season, because it is the
correct season for it to grow and flourish, there is much more of it. What
happens when supply is in abundance, and a surplus occurs? Prices go down! Ever pay $5 for a lb of semi-yellow/pink
strawberries in the dead of winter just so you could dip them in chocolate and
hand feed them to your lover in front of a roaring fire? That same $5 will get
you TWO lbs of strawberries in May, and they will be red, and delicious, and
taste like candy. You won’t need to slather them in cocoa calories either to
enjoy them, so hello hot bod. It’s a win-win.
Probably the best strawberries I ever had. Went back for a 2nd carton. |
Furthermore, when you end up with two pounds of delicious
strawberries, the gastronomic possibilities seem endless! You can rinse on a
handful and enjoy them as is, chop a few up and throw them in your cereal or
yogurt, put some in a blender with some rum and sugar….
Or, you can do what I did, and make strawberry muffins. I stopped at Whole Foods on my way home from
work to pick up some regular milk to make yogurt (I usually only keep Soy in my
fridge for cereal), and I was greeted in the front of the store by a beautiful
display of strawberries (they are just so clever with their product placement
there). I couldn’t resist, even though I knew I had a lb of strawberries I had
cut up the other day sitting in the fridge, untouched.
Also in my fridge were a lb of butter, a few glugs of
buttermilk, and an opened container of sour cream with approximately one
tablespoon missing. What I had to open
an ENTIRE container of sour cream to procure one tbs of the stuff for is beyond
me, but I hate waste, and I’m definitely not down to eat sour cream by the
spoonful with MDW a few weeks away. I turned to the interwebz for inspiration
and decided some of 2 lb pile of sweet, juicy loot would go to a batch of
strawberry muffins. I was also inspired
one of my favorite treats, the French Berry Roll from Metropolitan Bakery, which
sometimes has whole pieces of strawberry in it.
Do you know the Muffin Man? |
These muffins came out very moist, and not too sweet, just
how I like them. I ate one right out of the oven with a little butter on it, some
jam would’ve been nice, but I was too lazy to get up and get it once I settled
down with my muffin and my book. They could be made sweeter with some more
sugar, or maybe a swirl of Nutella, or some of that pretty crystallized sugar
sprinkled on top, but these worked for my taste. The strawberries I got are excellent,
fragrant, and very strawberry (really looking forward to eating some plain), so
their flavor really came through and they aren’t just anonymous pieces of fruit
in a muffin.
om nom nom nom |
Strawberry Muffins (makes a dozen)
Adapated from Joyful Baker
Dry Ingredients
2 ¼ cups of flour
1 ½ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp baking soda
½ tsp coarse salt
½ cup light brown sugar
Tsp of lemon zest
Wet Ingredients
2/3 cup sour cream
2 eggs, lightly beaten
½ cup butter, melted and cooled to room temp
½ - 1 cup of buttermilk
1 tbs vanilla extract
1 ½ cups strawberries cut into small pieces
Preheat oven to 350 and line a 12 cup muffin pan with paper
liners. Melt the butter and let it cool to room temperature.
In a large bowl, Whisk together the first four dry
ingredients, and then add the strawberries. Mix the strawberries gently into
the flour mixture so that they are coated with the flour. This will prevent
them from sinking to the bottom of the muffins. Mix in the sugar and the lemon
zest and stir gently until just combined.
Lightly beat the 2 eggs in the bottom of a medium bowl. Whisk in the sour cream, and then the melted
butter once it is cool. Add the vanilla. Make sure all ingredients are combined, but do
not overbeat.
Add the wet ingredient mixture to the dry and give it a
stir. Add the buttermilk as necessary. I found the batter to be really dense
and sticky, and added close to a cup of buttermilk. I would add it about ¼ cup at a time until
the batter is still sticky, but definitely wet, with all the dry ingredients incorporated. If you don’t have buttermilk, regular milk
would work, too.
Divide the batter evenly among the muffin cups and bake for
20-25 minutes. Definitely check the muffins at 20, mine needed an extra 5, but
it all depends. Once a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean, they
are done. Remove the muffins from the pan and allow to cool on a rack.
You could certainly use yogurt in this recipe rather than
sour cream. I always use reduce fat sour cream, and it’s what I had. Adding a ¼ cup of white sugar would also
sweeten them, perhaps if you were serving them to kids, and maybe melting a cup
of Nutella and swirling it through the batter would make them more dessert-y. I think the easiest addition would be a
sprinkle of crystallized sugar on top, or maybe some sliced almonds. If you want to be fancy, easy upgrade to a
mixed berry muffin by substituting a portion of the strawberries with
blueberries or blackberries.
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