Need more rhubarb recipes? The round-up is here. |
This dessert is such a lovely surprise, I wanted to give it a glammier name. Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp with Buttered Oats or Brown-Sugar Crisp with Strawberries and Rhubarb or Sweet Butter Nuts Summer Fruit Heaven. But what it is is a perfect fruit crisp that just so happens to be gluten-free! Okay. It doesn’t just so happen to be anything. We were charged with bringing dessert to a gluten-free household, and so I did a little research.
To be clear, I love a dietary challenge of any type. I like
an excuse to buy xanthan gum as much as the next person, and I like. . . what?
The way that making something special exaggerates the way that cooking is
already an act of caretaking. Of love.
My brother’s kids spent a week with us in April, right after
one of them went gluten-free, and it was a daily adventure. “I just love that
you made it for me!” was about all that could be said, and was, about the
lumpy, misshapen excuse for pizza. Gluten-free waffles, on the other hand, were
terrific, and I even kind of liked the beany aftertaste. (I am nothing if not a
bean-loving caricature of myself.) Many cookies were made and enjoyed. And next
time I will make this rich, buttery dessert.
The inspiration. We love you, Brookfield Farm. |
Use whatever fruit comes into season, and just adjust the
filling accordingly.
Pretty much anything will need less sugar than the rhubarb
does, unless you have access to those nice plump horrible slap-in-your-face
gooseberries to which my (English) mother is partial.
Cherries and apricots are
a lovely combination (and I am reposting that classic crisp here), as are
peaches and strawberries, nectarines and blueberries, and, when the leaves
start whispering about autumn, blackberries and apples. The cornstarch can stay
more or less constant—although you could add a little more or less if you sense
that your fruit is a little juicier or not.
Happy summer, my darlings. xo
Strawberry-Rhubarb
Crisp
I started with this beautiful recipe over at The Minimalist
Baker, and then added, oh, you know, more butter and sugar. And salt. And
fruit. Also I added cornstarch to thicken the filling. Vary the fruits as you
like.
For the topping:
1 cup oats (if gluten-free is your angle here, make sure to use oats labeled gluten-free)
½ cup coarsely chopped pecans
½ cup almond meal (Purchased, or grind raw almonds in the
food processor or blender; I like it to be rustic, with the skins still on, but
go with your preference.)
½ cup brown sugar
½ teaspoon kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
6 tablespoons cold butter, cut into small pieces
For the filling:
3 cups sliced rhubarb
3 cups sliced strawberries
2/3 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch stirred into a slurry with a
similar amount of water
Heat the oven to 350.
Stir together the dry topping ingredients, then add the
butter and rub it all together with your fingers, lifting handfuls of the
mixture and letting them fall rubbingly, until the butter is evenly distributed
and the topping has turned pebbly. Pop this in the fridge while you make the
filling.
Make the filling right in the dish (something 8 X 8 or 9 X
13 or in the middle will work—the dessert will be deeper or shallower
accordingly). Toss the fruit with the sugar, then drizzle over the cornstarch
slurry and use your hands to mix it all well.
Top the fruit with the crumble mixture and bake for 30-40
minutes, until the fruit is bubbling and caramelizing and the topping is as
brown as it can be without burning.
Serve hot, warm, room-temperature, or cold, with vanilla ice
cream.