Strawberry Clafoutis

I hope you all have been keeping well. Given the current state of affairs in the world, I have been finding solace in the home, in harvesting my first two strawberries in my pot, feeding myself with good films and cooking inspiration. 

I stumbled across the wonderful film The Hundred-Foot Journey this week. I watched it two times, read every article about it on Google and am now reading the book. The film features an Indian family immigrating from Mumbai to Europe after suffering the loss of their mother and home. They travel over Europe and settle in a small town in France, opening a restaurant across the street from a Michelin restaurant run by the fierce Madame Mallory. The story is a battle and coming together of flavour, cinematic beauty, family and tradition. It’s heartwarming and has everything I love about food, bridging culture, French and Indian cuisine. Personally, any film that features the main actor crying over home-cooked food is one worth watching. The book is beautifully written, I have lost much sleep over it and highly recommend both.

The Clafoutis is a recipe from the movie — one the chef stumbled across while studying his cookbooks. A French recipe I can now say I have made. I hesitate to delve into French cuisine, especially after reading the book of the movie and Julia Child’s memoir — My Life in France. French cuisine feels like such a classic yet complex cuisine to master. It takes a lot to keep things simple and master the technique to coax flavour out of the simplest, quality ingredients. I’m happy to start with this one.

This is a very versatile recipe made with staple ingredients milk, eggs, butter, sugar. You can substitute different kinds of fruit — berries, stone fruit, rhubarb (see note below). The texture is similar to that between a flan or a thick pancake. It's filling, but not too sweet so you won’t tire of it.

Aim for a silky smooth, lump-free batter here.

Strawberry Clafoutis

Ingredients

*Makes a 10-inch cake, serves 8

Butter, for buttering the pan
2 cups (226 grams) strawberries, hulled and halved lengthwise*
3 eggs
1 cup milk
2/3 cup flour
1/4 cup granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
Pinch of salt
Powdered sugar for dusting

Instructions

Preheat the oven to 350 F. Butter the bottom and sides of a pan with butter. Sprinkle one tablespoon of sugar all over the bottom of the pan. This will help release the cake without sticking and provide a crunchy bottom.

In a large mixing bowl, add the eggs, milk, sugar, vanilla. Mix until incorporated. Gradually add the flour and mix until silky to the touch. Pour the batter over a strainer to remove any lumps and into the pan. Arrange the strawberries over the top and bake until a skewer inserted into the batter comes out clean. Around 30 minutes. A golden crust will have formed on the sides. Dust with powdered sugar and serve warm.

* The strawberries bled into the batter. Next time, I will toss them in cornstarch (2 teaspoons) before adding over the batter.

* If you do not have powdered sugar, blitz white sugar in the blender till superfine.

* If using rhubarb, dice into pieces, macerate in 2 tbsps of sugar for 5 minutes and roast at 400F for 10 mins or until soft and bubbly. Let cool and add to the recipe like any other fruit.

Strawberry Clafoutis + New Read

Good morning. I hope you all have been keeping well. Given the current state of affairs in the world, I have been finding solace in the home, in harvesting my first two strawberries in my pot, feeding myself with good films and cooking inspiration. 

I stumbled across the wonderful film The Hundred-Foot Journey this week. I watched it two times, read every article about it on Google and am now reading the book. The film features an Indian family immigrating from Mumbai to Europe after suffering the loss of their mother and home. They travel over Europe and settle in a small town in France, opening a restaurant across the street from a Michelin restaurant run by the fierce Madame Mallory. The story is a battle and coming together of flavour, cinematic beauty, family and tradition. It’s heartwarming and has everything I love about food, bridging culture, French and Indian cuisine. Personally, any film that features the main actor crying over home-cooked food is one worth watching. The book is beautifully written, I have lost much sleep over it and highly recommend both.

The Clafoutis is a recipe from the movie — one the chef stumbled across while studying his cookbooks. A French recipe I can now say I have made. I hesitate to delve into French cuisine, especially after reading the book of the movie and Julia Child’s memoir — My Life in France. French cuisine feels like such a classic yet complex cuisine to master. It takes a lot to keep things simple and master the technique to coax flavour out of the simplest, quality ingredients. I’m happy to start with this one.

This is a very versatile recipe made with staple ingredients milk, eggs, butter, sugar. You can substitute different kinds of fruit — berries, stone fruit, rhubarb (see note below). The texture is similar to that between a flan or a thick pancake. It's filling, but not too sweet so you won’t tire of it.

Strawberries picked from my potted plant. My pride and joy.

Strawberries picked from my potted plant. My pride and joy.

strawberry+clafoutis+recipe.jpg
strawberry+clafoutis+recipe-7-1.jpg

Strawberry Clafoutis

Strawberry Clafoutis

*Makes a 10-inch cake, serves 8

Ingredients

Butter, for buttering the pan
2 cups (226 grams) strawberries, hulled and halved lengthwise*
3 eggs
1 cup milk
2/3 cup flour
1/4 cup granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
Pinch of salt
Powdered sugar for dusting

Instructions

Preheat the oven to 350 F. Butter the bottom and sides of a pan with butter. Sprinkle one tablespoon of sugar all over the bottom of the pan. This will help release the cake without sticking and provide a crunchy bottom.

In a large mixing bowl, add the eggs, milk, sugar, vanilla. Mix until incorporated. Gradually add the flour and mix until silky to the touch. Pour the batter over a strainer to remove any lumps and into the pan. Arrange the strawberries over the top and bake until a skewer inserted into the batter comes out clean. Around 30 minutes. A golden crust will have formed on the sides. Dust with powdered sugar and serve warm.

* The strawberries bled into the batter. Next time, I will toss them in cornstarch (2 teaspoons) before adding over the batter.

* If you do not have powdered sugar, blitz white sugar in the blender till superfine.

* If using rhubarb, dice into pieces, macerate in 2 tbsps of sugar for 5 minutes and roast at 400F for 10 mins or until soft and bubbly. Let cool and add to the recipe like any other fruit.

Avocado Chocolate Cake

Growing up in Taiwan, my definition of avocados revolved around the football-sized Choquette avocado sold in fruit shops or juice stalls at the night market. Bred for their intimidating size and mild flavour — the Choquette avocado is used for smoothies with milk, sugar and pudding. Salad culture in Taiwan is slowly catching up to the west, but it was not after moving to Canada that I expanded my worldview on avocados and the many ways one can eat it in salads, guacamole, ice cream and so on.

I have gone through many flourless chocolate cake recipes but this is a new favourite yet. No blender or spiralizer is needed just two perfectly ripe avocados. The raw batter is heavenly and tastes like a thick chocolate pudding. I would make it just to eat the batter. A gluten-free treat you can make vegan by substituting the butter with cashew butter or olive oil. I made a less sweetened version for Mother’s Day and topped it with edible flowers, dried fruit and cashew cream.

Avocado Chocolate Cake

Serves 8/fills a 13-inch baking pan

Wet Ingredients
2 ripe medium-large avocados
4 eggs

Dry Ingredients
1 cup of cocoa powder
1 3/4 cup brown sugar (use 1 1/2 cup for a less sweet version)
4 tablespoons butter, softened at room temperature
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 cup chopped dark chocolate (optional)

Preheat the oven to 325°F. Grease a 10 x 12-inch baking pan with butter or parchment paper. 

In a large mixing bowl, sift the cacao powder with a sieve into a fine powder. Add the brown sugar, baking powder and sea salt. Mix evenly and set aside.

In a medium mixing bowl, mash the avocados, breaking large pieces with a fork as you go. Crack eggs into bowl one by one, add the butter and stir to evenly distribute. Add the wet ingredients into the dry, stirring and scraping the bottom of the bowl from time to time. Pour the mixture into the baking pan and bake for 25-30 minutes. The middle of the cake should be firm while on the edge of gooey. Let the cake come to room temperature before cutting. Top with chopped dark chocolate, sea salt, edible flowers or cashew cream. 

mom, dad and avocado chocolate cake