"Oh it's just so delicious, it's bursting with fruity
yumminess and caramelized brown sugar topping that's just so tasty with the fruity
juices mixing with the buttery, crumbly topping. . . mmm." I have asked
Michael if he can think of any good crumble stories, and this is what he says.
"Honey, that's not really a story," I say, and he says, "Oh. A
story. Right. How it's even better than pie?" And they lived happily ever
after!
The thing is, crumble is even better than pie. And I say
this as a person who really loves pie. But also as a person who sometimes gets
called "The Crumble Queen," so there you go. This particular crumble
is my very favorite, and this is the exact right time to make it as I'm seeing
tons of cherries and apricots everywhere. But when cherry and apricots are
gone, you can make it with peaches and blueberries, though you'll want to
increase the flour and sugar a bit to compensate for the juiciness and
tartness. Oh, but try to make this version if you can: the fruit is so insanely
gorgeous--at all turns a mix of bright orange and deep red--and it goes so
beautifully with that meltingly crisp, brown-sugary crumb topping. It's based
on a recipe from the original Greens cookbook, and I've been making it for,
gulp, 15 years now, and it is the very best crumble I ever make, which is
saying a lot, given my infatuation with rhubarb. Okay, maybe it is tied with
rhubarb.
Of course--and here's the story, but I promise it's short--I
cannot make anything with apricots and not fall into fits of nostalgia over
Santa Cruz, and the house we lived in with our friend Sam, which has an
heirloom apricot tree in the front yard. Come July, apricots started thudding
to the ground like hail, these small and comically freckled apricots that
looked sort of unripe and homely, only then you'd split them open with your
thumbs and they'd be bursting with juice and as flavor, like all the apricots
in the world had been distilled into a single piece of deceptively unattractive
fruit. If you live somewhere that grows Blenheim apricots? (i.e. California), I
recommend gorging on them in great excess until the season ends, even if it
requires sneaking into a neighbor's yard. They probably have so many they won't
even notice.
And another thing I recommend? Inviting a pregnant woman to
live in your home. I simply can't imagine anything more delightful than
preparing food for a person who falls into basketball-bellied fits of rapture
every time a spoon enters her mouth. I swear Anni stopped eating only to blot
at her eyes with a napkin, tears of crumbly happiness leaking onto her face.
But then again, Michael himself was literally groaning. "This is the best
thing you make," Ben said, and I said, "Really?" and he said,
"Probably not, but that's how I'm feeling right now." And I have only
one question: Is he my kid or what?
Cherry-Apricot Crumble
Serves 4-8, depending
Active time: 25 minutes; total time: 70 minutes
Filling:
2 pounds of apricots
1 pound of cherries
1/4 cup (scant) flour
1/3 cup sugar
Topping:
3/4 cup flour
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 stick (1/2 cup) cold salted butter, cut into small pieces
Heat the oven to 400. Halve the apricots, pit them, then
halve them again into quarters (or, if they're not super-ripe, slice them up a
bit more). Pit the cherries. Combine the fruit with 1/4 cup flour and 1/3 cup
sugar in a bowl, then tip it into a baking dish. (Don't fret if there's some dry
flour and sugar kicking around--it will all dissolve as it cooks.)
Make the topping: Combine the flour, brown sugar, and salt
in a mixing bowl, then add the butter and work it in with your fingers: first
toss to coat it with the flour mixture, then take off your rings and use your
fingertips to rub the butter into the dry ingredients. This is a messy but not
unpleasant job: you'll be lifting handfuls of the mixture up out of the bowl,
then gently letting it fall through your fingertips as you rub it lightly
together. Eventually, you'll have a bowl full of clumpy lumpy crumble topping.
(Today when I did this, it was so hot in the kitchen that the butter got really
soft, but this didn't seem to cause a problem, except that it all stuck to my
fingers.)
Crumble the, er, crumble over the, uh, crumble, then bake it
in the oven for 40-45 minutes until it is browned and bubbling. Serve hot,
warm, room temperature, or cold with ice cream or whipped cream.
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