Cherries have been plentiful up here on the mountain lately (see previous post Ancestral Cherry Pie), so Kim decided to make a cherry crumble. This recipe was adapted from a rhubarb crumble recipe that originated at the Rancho de San Juan Restaurant. It is wonderful, as well as easy, so I recommend it to you all. On this particular day a storm was raging outside lending a special warmth to the baking that was going on inside.
Filling
De-stem and pit 4 quarts of cherries
Mix 1/2 C honey with the pitted cherries (more or less depending on the sweetness of the cherries)
Add a pinch of salt (approx. 1/4 tsp, to taste)
1 tsp vanilla extract
After adding the vanilla, the cherries should sit for an hour or so, mixing every so often to marinate them well.
Dissolve 3 tsp cornstarch in a little juice (cranberry, grape or any kind) and mix well into the cherry mixture.
Put cherry mixture into a baking dish.
Topping
Seeds from 3 pods cardamom, finely ground
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt (to taste)
1 1/2 C oatmeal
1 1/2 C flour
1 1/2 C brown sugar
1/2 tsp lemon zest (optional)
1 1/2 sticks melted butter
Combine all dry ingredients, mixing well with hands
Melt the butter and mix into the dry mixture, breaking up some of the big clumps
Add the crumble to the top of the cherry mixture, leaving it fairly loose (do not pack down)
Put a tray under the baking dish in the oven to catch overflow
Bake at 375 for about 45 minutes or until the fruit mixture bubbles up through the edges of the topping
Rhubarb Variation:
Filling
2 lbs rhubarb, 1/4 inch slice
1 C sugar
2 T cornstarch
Pinch of salt to taste
Mix all ingredients together and place in baking dish
Topping
1 C oatmeal
1 C flour
1 C brown sugar
1 stick melted butter
Pinch of salt to taste
Cover rhubarb mixture with the topping
Grace Kane says
YUMMMMMMY…are these pie cherries then? The tart ones? My grandma Grace made WONDERFUL pie cherry pies. My favorite. I must make a gluten free version;)
Thanks,
HighRoadArtist says
Well, this EXACT cherry crumble wasn’t made with pie cherries. The first one he made was and it was scrumptious! But this was amazingly good, too. Those wonderful, tart, pie cherries do make a difference, though, don’t they? Anna froze a bunch from their tree this year so we’ll be having a bit of summer in the middle of winter.
grace kane says
ohh you are so lucky to have those cherries for the winter!!! Bon appetit!
HighRoadArtist says
Yes, indeed, we are!