I have an obsession with fresh seasonal fruit. To me the ideal dessert is a summer peach, that’s it!
Summer is quickly ripening fruits and vegetables. Julia Child said, “You don’t have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces-just good food from fresh ingredients.” Fruit stands and farmers markets are buzzing with fresh flavors. It’s hot in Texas and we need something to quench and refresh us.
Certain flavors and spices come to mind during this season abundant with smell. My favorites are: cinnamon, blueberries, tomatoes, avocados, cherries, and lemons (to name a few).
I am reminded of summer by one of my favorite songs. Corinne Bailey Rae sings, “Summer came like cinnamon… So sweet, Little girls double-dutch on the concrete.” School is out and I find myself in the kitchen hungrier than ever, I’ve been starving for summer!
Cinnamon is my favorite spice. Did you know it’s a small tree? It grows in India, Egypt, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and Brazil. Cinnamon is one of the oldest most deliciously known spices. It also has great health benefits. It can be used for that dreadful cold, improve to enhance energy, and help with digestion.
There are endless ways to use it! Some of my summer favorites include sprinkling it on peaches and cream, iced chai tea, and cinnamon ice cream. This is one of my favorite treats during those long HOT Texas summers.
Ashley’s Summer Time Cinnamon Ice Cream:
1 large vanilla bean
1 3-inch cinnamon stick or ½ t ground cinnamon
1 ½ C whole milk
1 ½ C heavy crème
¾ sugar
Separate the eggs in a bowl. Split vanilla bean, add milk, 1 cup of crème, and sugar to a saucepan with the vanilla bean. Add remaining ½ C crème to the bowl with the egg yolks (I like to save the egg whites for breakfast). Whisk the yolks and crème. Temper the egg yolks (add about ¼ C of the hot milk mixture to the egg mixture so they don’t scramble). Then add it all to the milk mixture. Stir on medium low heat until the back of a wooden spoon is coated. Add cinnamon. Strain custard and discard cinnamon stick and vanilla bean. Cool, chill, then churn.
I recommend chef, Craig Alderson’s award winning recipe for Guacamole:
4 ripe avocados
Cilantro (handful chopped)
1/4 red onion finely diced
2 Serrano chilies minced
2 limes
garlic (2 cloves minced, and into paste)
2 tomatoes (Roma) diced/seeded
salt and pepper to taste with a dash of tabasco
Chop tomatoes, onion into medium dice add to bowl.
Add chopped cilantro
Add minced Serrano chile peppers
Add garlic
Mash avocados to your desired texture. Cover with plastic wrap until ready to serve chilled.
When I was little, I watched the movie The Jewel of the Nile over and over again. I consider the blueberry to be like the precious “Jewel of the Nile!”
The highest antioxidant capacity of all fresh fruit is the blueberry. Blueberries are: immune builders, age fighting, cancer fighting, heart healthy, good for vision, and also an anti depressant. Yes, it’s a super food!
I’ll never forget the summer I was fifteen and went to spend a week with my friend Jen’s grandmother in Tyler, Texas. We picked buckets of blueberries and froze them. They tasted like sweet cold candy! We couldn’t get enough of them and my children are the same way.
My favorite way to use blueberries is with a coffee cake.
stick of softened butter
tub of mascarpone cream cheese
cup of sugar
2 eggs
1 C flour
1t baking soda
¼ salt
1T vanilla
Container of blueberries (or as many as you like)
2 T Cinnamon sugar (just mix the two)
Beat softened butter and cheese at medium speed of an electric mixer until creamy; gradually add sugar beating well. Add eggs. Combine flour, baking powder, and salt. Stir into butter mixer. Stir in vanilla and fold in berries. Pour into a 9-inch round cake pan coated with cooking spray or butter. Top with sprinkled cinnamon sugar. Bake at 350 for 1 hour.
I am a magnet for cherries! They might be my most favorite thing to eat! I prefer them straight from the bag, no baking necessary; just a bowl to catch the pits! Cherries are loaded with fiber (I craved them when I was pregnant). Like blueberries, cherries help with heart disease, fighting cancer and are loaded with antioxidants.
1 ¼ sticks unsalted softened butter
1 C flour
1 ¼ C ground toasted almonds (or hazelnuts)
1 C sugar
1 t salt
5 egg whites
4 t cherry brandy
1 T vanilla
30 sweet cherries
Preheat oven to 400. Spray with Pam with flour. Melt butter. Whisk together flour, ground almonds (or hazelnuts), sugar, and salt in a bowl. Beat egg whites in a seperate bowl, and whisk until fluffy with an electric mixer. Stir in cherry brandy and vanilla. Pour in butter, and whisk to combine. Then combine the wet mixture to the dry and let stand for 20 minutes. Use a mini ice cream scoop to pour batter into each muffin tin, filling about half way. Push a cherry into each, keeping the stem up. Bake until a toothpick comes out clean and cakes are golden brown, 12 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes. Run a knife around edges to loosen, and unmold. Cakes can be frozen or stored in airtight containers at room temperature overnight.
8-10 roma tomatoes (peeled and seeded)
1 lb farfalle (butterfly in Italian) pasta
Fresh grated black pepper
4 cloves minced garlic
1 C chopped basil
2 t mint
2 t salt
1 t red pepper flakes
½ C extra virgin olive oil
½ fresh parmesan
1 C fontina cheese (diced)
½ fresh mozzarella (torn)
1 C kalamata olives
Parmesan
Peel, seed, and chop tomatoes. Mix ingredients and let sit at least 2/3 hours or overnight. Boil pasta. Add cheeses and tomato mixture while warm. Top with grated Parmesan.
Photo: Ravello, Italy overlooking lemons galore!
You know the saying, “When life gives you lemons, make lemonade?” Well, I think that’s because lemons are known to lift your spirits. Maybe it’s the color yellow, or that the smell is rejuvenating and calming. Whatever the reason, it’s always nice to have an abundance of lemons in your kitchen. I’m crazy about meyer lemons and like to make lemoncello from them. When in Ravello, Italy my husband and I had never seen so many lemons before. Miles and miles of gorgeous yellow that smelled heavenly. I suggest a summer spritzer of lemoncello, Pellegrino, and perhaps some chocolate mint.When in Italy, one of our favorite things to eat is linguine and clams. It has such a delicate flavor and adding lemon makes it fresh. My husband and I like to make this one together. He grew up in Rhode Island where he used to hand pick little neck clams right by his house. Can you imagine growing up in Rhode Island and having clam bakes?!?
1 lb spaghetti
½ C extra virgin olive oil
2 shallots, finely chopped
5-6 garlic cloves, finely chopped
3 lb little neck clams, scrubbed
½ C dry white wine
½ C chopped fresh Italian parsley
½ salt
½ pepper
2 T butter
1 T fresh lemon juice
Freshly grated zest of 1 lemon