Strawberries: That’s My Jam!
Strawberry season is around the corner. Coming just after Mother’s Day and the last risk of frost, I’m ready for their arrival along with the true warm days of spring. Fresh New Jersey-grown strawberries are just as wonderful as Jersey tomatoes. The grocery store options simply cannot compare with our locally grown strawberries (and later, our tomatoes) in season.
Local Farms to Buy From or U-Pick
There are many opportunities to purchase strawberries in our area directly from local farms.
By the way, picking your own strawberries is a great family outing with children. The fruit is low to the ground, so easy to pick without any pesky thorns.
East Windsor
Hopewell
Lawrence Township
Pennington
Plainsboro
West Windsor
Local Farmers Markets
While on the topic of shopping local farms, most municipalities in Mercer County have a seasonal Farmers Market where you can purchase produce directly from our area farmers. The markets allow you access to smaller farms and also local artisan vendors.
Ewing/Trenton
Pennington/Hopewell
Princeton
Robbinsville
West Windsor
Strawberries on Strawberries Recipe
Here is my unusual - but simple - family recipe. It is a fresh strawberry sauce over freshly picked berries. You’ll need:
2 pints freshly picked & washed strawberries, divided
¼ - ½ cup of white sugar, or to taste
¼ teaspoon of lemon juice
Trim leaves & stems off of the berries, slicing them in half as you go. Place half of them in a serving bowl. Place the other half in a blender or food processor with the sugar and lemon juice. Very briefly blend together. You can blend smoothly or leave small pieces. This is the sauce. Pour it over the sliced berries and serve.
If you like strawberry shortcake you’re halfway there. Break up biscuits, scones or angel food cake into individual bowls. Add sliced strawberries to each bowl, then pour over some of the fresh sauce. Add a dollop of whipped cream. Enjoy!
Freezing
Unfortunately, fresh strawberries spoil quickly. After you’ve finished eating your fresh and washed strawberries out of hand and enjoyed fresh strawberry recipes, you can freeze the rest.
Freezing is easily done by washing the berries, trimming off the stems and leaves, and slicing them in half; if desired. Spread them over a cookie sheet and place that in the freezer. When frozen, remove the berries from the sheet and put them into freezer bags. They’ll not stick together, so in the future, you can easily take out as much or as little as you’d like for a recipe.
Book Recommendations
A strawberry-themed cookbook:
- Strawberry Love: 45 sweet and savory recipes for shortcakes, hand pies, salads, salsas, and more by Cynthia Stevens Graubart
A cookbook all about berries:
- Simple Fruit: seasonal recipes for baking, poaching, sautéing, and roasting by Laurie Pfalzer and Charity Burggraaf
- The Berry Book by Gail Gibbons
- Grow Your Own Mini Fruit Garden: planting and tending small fruit trees and berries in gardens and containers by Christy Wilhelmi
- The Fruit Gardener's Bible: a complete guide to growing fruits and nuts in the home garden by Lewis Hill and Leonard P. Perry
- Growing Berries and Currants: a directory of varieties and how to cultivate them successfully by Richard Bird and Kate Whiteman
- Edible landscaping by Rosalind Creasy
- What's Wrong with My Fruit Garden?: 100% organic solutions for berries, trees, nuts, vines, and tropicals by David C. Deardorff, David and Kathryn B. Wadsworth
- Good Berry, Bad Berry: who's edible, who's toxic, and how to tell the difference (finding and identifying the most common wild berries of North America) by Helen Yoest
- by Kim Luke, Hightstown Branch
Thanks for the local strawberry picking recommendations! It is super convenient and helpful to have a list of places that I look forward to visiting soon.
ReplyDeleteI cannot wait to try the strawberry sauce recipe. It looks so easy and delicious!
Little Acres has not been open for quite a few years now.
ReplyDelete