Strawberry and Almond Crumble
From BBC Food
This is a crumble of dreams. This is nothing short
of alchemy: you take
the vilest, crunchiest supermarket strawberries, top them with an
almondy, buttery rubble, bake and turn them on a cold day into the
taste of English summer. Naturally, serve with lashings of cream: I
regard this is as obligatory, not optional.
For this recipe you will need 1 ovenproof pie dish approximately
21cm/10in diameter x 4cm/2in deep (approx. 1.25 litre/2 pints capacity).
Ingredients
For the filling
500g/1lb 2oz strawberries,
hulled
50g/2oz caster sugar
25g/1oz ground almonds
4 tsp vanilla extract
For the topping
110g/4oz plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
75g/3oz cold butter, diced
100g/3½oz flaked
almonds
75g/3oz demerara sugar
double cream, to serve
Method
Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6. Put the hulled strawberries into
your pie dish (I use a round one) and sprinkle over the sugar, almonds
and vanilla extract. Give the dish a good shake or two to mix the
ingredients.
Now for the crumble topping: put the flour and baking powder in a
mixing bowl and rub in the cold, diced butter between thumb and fingers
(or in a freestanding mixer or food processor). When you’ve finished,
it should resemble rough, pale oatmeal.
Stir in the flaked almonds and demerara sugar with a fork.
Tip the topping over the strawberry filling, covering the strawberries
in an even layer and pressing the topping in a little at the edges of
the dish.
Set the dish on a baking sheet and bake in the oven for 30 minutes, by
which time the crumble topping will have darkened to a pale gold and
some pink-red juices will be seeping and bubbling out at the edges.
Leave to stand for 10 minutes before serving, and be sure to put a jug
of chilled double cream on the table alongside.
Top recipe tip
The crumble can be assembled one day ahead. Cover with cling film and
store in fridge until needed. Bake as directed in the recipe, but
allowing an extra 5–10 minutes’ cooking time. Check crumble is piping
hot in the centre. Crumble topping can also be made and frozen in
resealable plastic bags, for up to 3 months. Sprinkle the topping
direct from the freezer over the fruit, breaking up large lumps with
your hands. Alternatively, the assembled but unbaked crumble can be
frozen, wrapped in a double layer of cling film and aluminium foil, for
up to 3 months. Defrost for 24 hours in the fridge and bake as above.
By Nigella Lawson
From Nigella Kitchen
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