We are
well into Autumn now so still a busy time in the Kitchen garden. We should still be eating well from the
garden, collecting, preserving and drying crops for winter eating.
The
days are getting noticeably shorter and the weather cooler but conditions are
still suitable for many vegetables. The hedgerows will be fruiting as well –
look around for elderberries, hawthorns, crabapples, wild sown apples and
blackberries. Our fruit trees, in particular the apples are starting to produce
now and the race is on to make jams and jellies to preserve the fruit for
winter eating. I recently made
individual apple and blackberry crumble puddings that were particularly
delicious. Here is the recipe.
Apple
and Blackberry Crumble.
Peel
and slice 5-6 cooking apples such as Granny Smith, Bramley or whatever apples
you have in season. Put into a pot with
a small amount of water and cook until tender. Put serving size portions into
oven proof individual pudding bowls or ramikans and sprinkle blackberries on
top. You can add a little bit of sugar to the fruit if you like. Sprinkle over
a little bit of sugar.
Crumble.
1 cup
flour
100g
butter – melted butter
1/3 cup of sugar
Pinch
of cinnamon
Put
all of the ingredients into a mixing bowl and mix together. Pulse in your processor if using until it
forms clumps. You don’t want the crumble to be too fine – you are looking for lumpy crumbly mix.
Sprinkle
on top of the fruit and then bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes or so. Slivered almonds make a nice crunchy addition
along with sliced almonds scattered on top.
Tips:
You can stew your apples earlier and have in the fridge. Prepare your crumble
and store covered in the fridge. If you using the oven to cook the dinner you
can quickly prepare the dish to pop into the hot oven once you have taken the
dinner out. Cook about 180 C.
You
can also substitute some of the flour with oats, coconut, muesli, ground
almonds, slivered almonds – experiment with what you think your family will
like. Any left over crumble can be put
into a plastic bag and frozen, ready to sprinkle over fruit at a moment’s
notice.
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